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| August 27, 2001 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Naming Baby.
The nurse asked, "What's her name?" My wife and I gave each other simultaneous "frowny faces." Name? We didn't have a name yet. Now THIS was going to be the hard part. Naming a child is an important part of parenting. Give a child a good name, someday he might be a senator. Give a child a bad name, he might end up as, say, a senator. That's a bad example, but you get the idea. A good name is more than just choosing a couple of words that don't spell out something bad in initials (we considered Bethany Michelle, but decided that "BM", short for bowel movement, was less than ideal). A name can define future greatness, respect, fame, wealth, and power, not to mention the likelihood of making a livelihood selling hubcaps. Think about it: all the great men and women of history received names, presumably at birth, that jibed perfectly with their future accomplishments. Winston Churchill's parents knew enough not to call him "Buddy." Katherine Hepburn would never have been a star if her name had been "Cindi." Richard Nixon perfectly fulfilled his nickname, "Dick." The weird thing about naming a child is that you're expected to figure it out by the first day of the baby's life. The way I figure it, you should be allowed to wait until the kid is at least three years old, so you know whether your son is a "Moses" or a "Hugh," or whether your daughter is a "Stella" or a "Bella." My wife and I had started the naming process months ago. Complicating this process was our decision to wait until the baby's birth to find out the baby's gender. (In fact, my wife had been sure that it was a boy.) We filled up a ragged spiral notebook with various ideas, like Thurston and Maude. Well, those were my ideas. My wife's ideas were less eccentric. A few names were easy to rule out: Adolph, Judas, Napoleon, Benedict, Monica, and William Jefferson Clinton. Also, a friend warned that giving a boy either "Ray" or "Lee" as a middle name practically guaranteed that he would end up on death row. Making matters worse, we had to consider the "meaning" behind each name. For instance, my first name, Matthew, means "one who humps sod." I did not know this until I purchased a book called "Baby Names And More Baby Names," which I found at our local supermarket for only 99 cents. It saved us from making many horrible mistakes. For example, here are some of the names we considered and the surprising meanings behind them:
Of course, we had help with this decision. For example, two girls who live across the street, Sarah and Paige, were talking with my wife one recent afternoon.
Now that we've got this name thing figured out, the next 20 years of parental duties should be a breeze.
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topic you'd like to suggest? ©2001 Matthew Farr |
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