Names (a lunch break identity voyage)
Jul. 18th, 2008 11:58 amIf I'd-a been a boy, my mother maintains I would have been named Robin Christopher.
When I go in drag or male-space, that name feels like home.
meowse pointed out the other day that, in his admittedly limited experience, a lot of trans or otherwise genderbent people pick cross-names that are surprisingly ambiguous. I have observed this more among transmen than transwomen, but I definitely have seen some of that. A lot of names that are androgynous, common abbreviations for feminine names, or shortened to a nickname rare enough that it's ambiguous. Alex, Lee, Sol (short for Solomon, but ambiguous through rarity), Chris... Robin...
I've also known Brian, John, and a couple of Jacks, so it's not an all-sweeping trend or anything, but it is a little surprising.
He says if he wanted to switch, he'd go for something like "Jessica" so people wouldn't have to guess. I agree in theory, but then in practice... I was almost born with these names. They feel like mine. When I'm in drag, I don't want to feel like I'm under an assumed name. Jack isn't my name. Robin is. Chris is. But with my cute little heart-shaped face, it doesn't help people cue very well, and that's frustrating.
So it's time again to haul out the Baby Name Wizard and Top 25 70s/80s lists for names popular among boys-but-not-girls in my birth era and the one just after it. (Like most women with my facial shape, I look a decade younger when I cross-dress.) Names I might grow into with some thought:
Justin. Marcus, but not Mark, and not Marc because that's just a bit too limp-wristed. Andrew, but not Andy. Rob, but not Robert (aha! a solution to the Robin ambiguity?). Paul. Maybe James, which I suddenly realize is also my paternal grandfather's name, though he goes by Jim, which I would not. (But my maternal grandfather's name, Karl, is right out, as is Ray, the middle name I inherited from him.)
There's Glenn, of course, which would have the odd double recognition of the fact that men can be referred to by last name more easily than women. I'm thinking of using Glenn Merrell as an aren't-I-clever* masculine pen name. Maybe I should just own that one a little harder.
I'm oddly tempted by Dean, my father's middle name, with that slightly rare 50s flavor. My actual first name was only in the top 1000 (barely) during the 50s. So going for something slightly rare and slightly out of date makes sense, from that perspective.
Popular and possibly appealing but definitely not me: Matt/hew, Michael/Mike, Josh/ua, Jason, Jeff/rey, Jeremy, Jacob/Jake. John. Jack. Anthony/Tony. Adam. Aaron. Brandon. Brian. Benjamin. David/Dave. Eric. Kevin. Charles. Scott. Tim/othy. Greg/ory. Nathan/Nate. Pat/rick (just NO). Pete/r. Phil/ip. Ryan. Rich/ard/Dick. Steve/n. Thomas/Tom. Travis. Vince/nt. Victor (again, just NO). Zach/ary.
Near misses: Daniel would be in, but I'd end up shortening it, and Dan is right out. I had no idea Blake was so popular or so overwhelmingly a boy's name; too bad it's not quite mine. Will might be all right (not William or Bill), but J is considering switching to that. I like Nick, but I'd have FK echoes in my head until the end of tiiiime. Rick I feel better about, possibly through long association with my Changeling days, but I refuse to name myself after my LARP character.
I think most of the names I've crossed off I've had strong associations with some person or another, a guy I went to school with or something. So "Aaron" is permanently tied to Class Clown and "Adam" to Basketball Player and "Brian" to a couple of very hot guys I have known (one bio, one trans), and since I'm not them, I can't be their names. Brains are odd little ducks.
Some, I realize, I threw out because they are simply too common-sounding. I have never had a common-sounding name. The only common name that completely slips past that filter is Chris, because it's mine. The common names that I like above have a little more formality to them; they ring in my mind as classy.
The M/M writing book points out that women naming characters tend to go for the fancy and more formal names, while men naming characters tend to go for "Jack". I think I'm willing to own this tendency. I'd rather be a Marcus than a Mark. My parents gave me one of them wacky girl names that no one can spell without guessing, and I'm fond of that name, so that will always be with me.
At this time, members of the peanut gallery are invited to opine, with either general or specific thoughts on identity, personal preferences, distinctive vs. commonness, gender variance in name-choosing behaviors, Leonard Cohen lyrics, or anything else that strikes their fancy.
* For those who don't know me in person, this is a modification of my surname and personal name in reverse order.
When I go in drag or male-space, that name feels like home.
I've also known Brian, John, and a couple of Jacks, so it's not an all-sweeping trend or anything, but it is a little surprising.
He says if he wanted to switch, he'd go for something like "Jessica" so people wouldn't have to guess. I agree in theory, but then in practice... I was almost born with these names. They feel like mine. When I'm in drag, I don't want to feel like I'm under an assumed name. Jack isn't my name. Robin is. Chris is. But with my cute little heart-shaped face, it doesn't help people cue very well, and that's frustrating.
So it's time again to haul out the Baby Name Wizard and Top 25 70s/80s lists for names popular among boys-but-not-girls in my birth era and the one just after it. (Like most women with my facial shape, I look a decade younger when I cross-dress.) Names I might grow into with some thought:
Justin. Marcus, but not Mark, and not Marc because that's just a bit too limp-wristed. Andrew, but not Andy. Rob, but not Robert (aha! a solution to the Robin ambiguity?). Paul. Maybe James, which I suddenly realize is also my paternal grandfather's name, though he goes by Jim, which I would not. (But my maternal grandfather's name, Karl, is right out, as is Ray, the middle name I inherited from him.)
There's Glenn, of course, which would have the odd double recognition of the fact that men can be referred to by last name more easily than women. I'm thinking of using Glenn Merrell as an aren't-I-clever* masculine pen name. Maybe I should just own that one a little harder.
I'm oddly tempted by Dean, my father's middle name, with that slightly rare 50s flavor. My actual first name was only in the top 1000 (barely) during the 50s. So going for something slightly rare and slightly out of date makes sense, from that perspective.
Popular and possibly appealing but definitely not me: Matt/hew, Michael/Mike, Josh/ua, Jason, Jeff/rey, Jeremy, Jacob/Jake. John. Jack. Anthony/Tony. Adam. Aaron. Brandon. Brian. Benjamin. David/Dave. Eric. Kevin. Charles. Scott. Tim/othy. Greg/ory. Nathan/Nate. Pat/rick (just NO). Pete/r. Phil/ip. Ryan. Rich/ard/Dick. Steve/n. Thomas/Tom. Travis. Vince/nt. Victor (again, just NO). Zach/ary.
Near misses: Daniel would be in, but I'd end up shortening it, and Dan is right out. I had no idea Blake was so popular or so overwhelmingly a boy's name; too bad it's not quite mine. Will might be all right (not William or Bill), but J is considering switching to that. I like Nick, but I'd have FK echoes in my head until the end of tiiiime. Rick I feel better about, possibly through long association with my Changeling days, but I refuse to name myself after my LARP character.
I think most of the names I've crossed off I've had strong associations with some person or another, a guy I went to school with or something. So "Aaron" is permanently tied to Class Clown and "Adam" to Basketball Player and "Brian" to a couple of very hot guys I have known (one bio, one trans), and since I'm not them, I can't be their names. Brains are odd little ducks.
Some, I realize, I threw out because they are simply too common-sounding. I have never had a common-sounding name. The only common name that completely slips past that filter is Chris, because it's mine. The common names that I like above have a little more formality to them; they ring in my mind as classy.
The M/M writing book points out that women naming characters tend to go for the fancy and more formal names, while men naming characters tend to go for "Jack". I think I'm willing to own this tendency. I'd rather be a Marcus than a Mark. My parents gave me one of them wacky girl names that no one can spell without guessing, and I'm fond of that name, so that will always be with me.
At this time, members of the peanut gallery are invited to opine, with either general or specific thoughts on identity, personal preferences, distinctive vs. commonness, gender variance in name-choosing behaviors, Leonard Cohen lyrics, or anything else that strikes their fancy.
* For those who don't know me in person, this is a modification of my surname and personal name in reverse order.
no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 01:19 am (UTC)Had I been male, I would have acquired the name that went to my brother, Joseph Edward III. Which is pretty eh, though I like the nickname Jay, despite (because of?) my father using it the entire time I've been alive, and I've used it occasionally for internet personae, as well as for a while when it followed naturally from me being listed on attendance lists as "J. Lee".
I have decide I really really want the name Valentine. I'm not allowing myself to take it, though, 'cause that's just silly. :) But if I did, the combination of a 3 syllable first name and a 3 syllable middle name would just overwhelm my poor Ellis-island-chopped trochee last name, and I'd want to revert it to Zemanje (zee-mahn-yay) to get three anapaests.
I also have sneaking suspicions I may have imprinted on that name because of a video game character. Yeesh.
As far as popular names, I like Michael, Ryan, Alexander, Dustin, and Vincent. Oo, and I really like 'Rusty' from the first comment above, though I'm not sure how I feel about Russell. Probably better to have a nickname you like than a name you like, though.
no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 03:16 am (UTC)I think if I know anyone who could carry off the name Valentine, it would be you, triple trisyllabic or no. :)