 |
Does Anybody Know My Name?
originally a guest column for Jon Carroll in The San Francisco
Chronicle
When I was four months pregnant and we knew we were
having a boy, my
husband and I began to search for names. We both liked Irish
names. Still, we argued.
"How about Galen?" "I'd rather Christopher." "What
about Aubrey?" "I'd rather Sean."
We settled on "Christopher Sean," until a friend
said: "It sounds like he'll be born in a
crew-neck sweater, ready for the Cambridge boating team." "That's
the problem with
names," I told my husband. "They don't stand on
their own. They remind you of
something." "Of course," he said. "That's partly
the point." When drew a blank, he
looked annoyed. "Names are a legacy," he
said. "They give you roots."
I knew better. At best, names are a temporary
legacy. They can camouflage
roots. They can vanish in an instant: I knew because
I'd changed my name. And all
those months, whenever we argued, I thought of my mother, seven
months pregnant,
poring over my father's family tree--an exotic tome for the daughter
of two Rumanian
Jews--looking for my name. My father's family went
back to Wales and Fletcher
Christian. His relatives fought in the Revolution and signed their
names with an X--the
symbol for Christ's cross, as well as illiteracy. My mother's
father was raised as a
Chassid in the Rumanian town of Yasse. He studied Aramaic
and talked to ghosts.
During those hot June nights in Princeton, while
my father snored on a pull-out
daybed, my mother sat with her feet in ice-water, reading names
from his family tree.
Most of those names were as ordinary as spoons or coins. But
it was a different kind of
name she chose for me--hard to spell, belying antiquity. It belonged
to my great-great-
great-grandmother who lived in North Carolina, smoked a corncob
pipe and wasn't
completely happy with the outcome of the Civil War. Her name
was Linnie.
My mother was trying to escape her origins. Instead
she walked back into them.
Like her father's name, Liebovici, Linnie had all the characteristics
of a foreign name. It
didn't stand on its own. It had to be explained. Was
it a boy's name? a nickname?
short for Linda? what was my real name? At the beginning
of every year teachers
grilled me. Even my father's mother, who ruled a Presbyterian
manse that looked like
the house in Clue. would bellow: "What kind of a name is Linnie,
anyway? Not a
natural one anymore is what I say!" Her mouth worked
like a hinge on a narrow
mailbox. Hello there! Pause. Good ta see
ya. Pause. Ever been baptized? Pause. Well.
Ya
oughta be.
In the Bronx, my mother's mother found the name "Linnie" exotic
but lovely.
She called me shone madele, or used the Jewish diminutive Linna-lee. Her
apartment
faced an avenue where women on camp stools crocheted, gossiped,
pulled their
stockings below their knees, fanned their crotches with the Freiheit. My
grandmother
sat among them, and sometimes called out: " Yoo hoo! Linna-lee!
The ice-cream man is
here!"
Eventually, tired of explaining, I followed
the example of many weary
immigrants: I changed my name. I was in California
during the early eighties: Mary's
called themselves "Bloodroot. Pete's said: "Hello!
My name is Sky." I chose "Thaisa"
because I was used to an exotic name and I liked the fact that
it meant "to tie" or "to
bond," in Greek. Unlike "Linnie," I liked
the way it sounded. No one has ever asked me
if it's a boy's name or a nick-name--or my real name, even though,
in many senses, it
really isn't.
When our son was born we still hadn't found a name
and as far as I was
concerned he could be nameless forever. That way the
world couldn't claim him. He
would have no legacy to throw away. I liked watching him sleep, not tethered to the world of permanent records. My husband begged me to choose a working-title. We decided on "Casey Alexander." Alexander, because it belonged to a general on my husband's side, and (like my mother, after all) we were seduced by origins. Casey, because it sounded like a friendlier version of Christopher. "It matches him, doesn't it?" said my husband, looking at the obscure blue form in the cradle. "Of course it does!" I said.
Casey is now eleven. He does karate kicks in the kitchen, and asks: "Mom--were the seventies icy?" He also says he's thinking
of changing his name. "To what?" I wonder. "To Tasselhof," he answers. He pauses, does another karate kick. "Not that I don't like Casey. But Tasselhof is extra cool."
|