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Fun in Fours

What’s in a name?

Monday 29 June 2009 | general

I’m not sure how I got into the habit of referring to those closest to me by their initials: “L” for “Lena,” “K” for “Kinga.” Perhaps it was a sense of anonymity for those who don’t know us personally, but we don’t get many of those kind of visitors. Still, it’s a stylistic choice, one which I will continue.

Except for this post.

“Lena,” I also learned after naming our daughter, is a famous picture: “The Lenna (or Lena) picture is one of the most widely used standard test images used for compression algorithms.” (Source)

When Lena was still an unimaginably large bump in Kinga’s belly, we weren’t sure what to name her. We’d thought about naming her after her Polish grandmother, Janina. Yet, knowing the difference in pronunciation of “j” in Polish and English (It’s “y” as in “yeah” in Polish, for the uninitiated), we opted out due to the tendency everyone would have to mistakenly mispronounce her name. (The irony is, they still do it with “Lena,” for most want to pronounce it with a long “ee.”)

Our next choice was Amelia, but we were hesitated.

It was at this point, I believe, that Kinga suggested Lena, and I liked the name immediately. We settled on “Lena” fairly quickly once Kinga suggested it.

It had all the qualities we were looking for in a name:

  1. It was strong and feminine.
  2. It could be easily pronounced by Americans (a criterion which quickly would have ruled out Wladyslawa, Malgorzata, and most definitely Zdzislawa, had they been in the running).
  3. It was fairly uncommon but didn’t have that made-up feel. “I only know one ‘Lena,’ from college,” Kinga informed me.

The most uncommon name I’ve heard of is “La-a,” which is alternately spelled “Le’a.” It’s pronounced “Ladasha.” (The alternate spelling might also be pronounsed “Laapastrophea” or “Lainvertedcommaa.”) I’ve heard this is an urban legend, but Google “La-a” and you’ll get baby name site results for “La-a.”

Now, though, Lenas are popping up like mushrooms after a storm. Two of our friends have since named their daughters Lena; a friend who works in the hospital tells us that there are a lot of Lenas in the maternity ward.

And the same is true for Amelia. Very, very popular.

Part of me wants to say we were simply on the cutting edge of naming. By it also seems to hint at some kind of hidden current in societies that suggests things that bubble up slowly. After all, we only know two of the multitude of families who’ve opted for “Lena,” so the phenomenon can’t be attributed to our influence, as flattering as that might be.

K is frustrated. (The old habit returns…) “If we had another daughter, I’d want to name her ‘Amelia.'” And now we can’t.

Zdzislawa is looking better and better…

There’s also the LENA language system and a rock star in New York, not to mention the famous Polish/Czech Lenka pop star, and the Australian Lenka actress/pop singer.

A parallel thought to this is how children seem to grow into their names. Lena is a Lena. There’s no other name that seems to fit her, just like Madeline is Madeline. The name “Lena” is short and energetic, strong and joyful, single-minded; the girl Lena is short and energetic, strong and joyful, single-minded. “Amelia” would never fit Lena, and “Janina” is a worse match still.

When I was in college, I tried to go by my middle name, Lawrence. At the time, it somehow sounded more intellectual, more serious, than “Gary.” The trouble was, I could never remember that I was Lawrence. I gave up after one semester and took to heart how ingrained our names become.

Which makes me wonder about Bono, Eminem, Sting, Prince, Moby, Twiggy, Dido, Goldie, Cher, Lulu, Pink, and Seal. Do they so identify with their stage names that they prefer them to their real name? Do Sting’s closest friends call him “Sting” or “Gordon?” Does Bono go by “Paul” when the band is recording? And Prince — that’s a case all by itself.

So was Shakespeare right? Yes and no. Lena is not “Amelia,” though if we’d named her Amelia, I would be have reversed those names…

3 Comments

  1. Kinga

    Czy Lena jest az tak popularnym imieniem w Polsce w tym momencie? W 2008 roku na polskiej arenie muzycznej zablysnela Lenka ze swoim singlem “The Show”. Rowniez w 2008 roku w telewizji polskiej pojawil sie nowy serial “Czas honoru”, gdzie jedna z bohaterek jest Lena. Czy te dwa zdarzenia faktycznie zapoczatkowaly nowa mode? No trudno, jak wrocimy to Lena moze byc jedna z dziesieciu Len w szkole… Ja i tak bardzo lubie to imie i do naszej Lenki bardzo pasuje.
    W jezyku arabskim istnieje imie Lana (czyta sie tak jak sie pisze). Wczoraj bylismy na basenie. Jedna z dziewczynek wolala kolezanke – Lana, Lana. Nasza Lena pelna przejecia odpowiadala – I am here, I am here…

  2. Maja

    jak wiecie imiona to moj konik i stale zrodlo obserwacji socjologicznej. uwazam, ze imie ma ogromna moc odzialywania na czlowieka, ktory je nosi a nasze teoretyczne nastawienie do imienia moze sie zmienic pod wplywem poznania osoby o danym imieniu. jak Gary, eksperymentowalam ze swoim i musze przyznac, ze powrot do Mai po Marii (ktora swego czasu miala dodawac mi powagi, autorytetu i doroslosci) byl jak odzyskanie zgubionego po drodze dziecinstwa. czuje sie Majka, Marie zostawilam za soba bez zalu.

    a propos pytan. najpierw na pocieszenie:

    http://www.edziecko.pl/ciaza_i_porod/1,79331,6155509,Najpopularniejsze_imiona_w_2008_roku.html?skad=rss

    Leny w pierwszej dwudziestce najpopularniejszych imion w Polsce nie ma. W Warszawie znajdziecie jÄ… na 20 miejscu:

    http://gorny.edu.pl/imiona/index.php?

    potwierdzam, ze stale slyszymy o nowych Lenkach (zapomnialas Kiniu o bohaterce serialu Na dobre i zÅ‚e) np. w fajnym zestawieniu siostr blizniaczek: Lena i Nina (tez coraz czestsze), ale nie przejmowalabym sie na Twoim miejscu – przeciez nie wybraliscie Julii. imie piekne, ale jego wlascicielki beda przeklinac rodzicow a szal w Polsce trwa. zauwazylas zeby dziewczyny z rocznikow 70 nazywaly swoje corki imieniem Agnieszka? w moich klasach zawsze wystepowaly minimum 3 na raz.

    nie wiem, czy tylko telewizja ma wplyw na popularnosc pewnych imion? scenarzysci w koncu tez czerpia z zycia. a na przestrzeni lat moda na imiona charakteryzuje sie powracajacymi falami, czy znasz jakas Marianne? rzadkie imie, ktore powoli do nas wraca a bylo taka “Julia” pod koniec XIX w.

    zauwazylam tez analizujac dodatek Witajcie na swiecie w Gazecie Stolecznej, ze rodzice boja sie czy nie potrafia zdecydowac sami i chetnie ogladaja sie na innych. i tak w jednym szpiatlu nie bedzie wsrod noworodkow Leny, ale juz w drugim, gdzie zakladam pojawili sie rodzice zdecydowani wczesniej na Lene – pomysl moze zostac podchwycony przez innych rodzacych w tym samym czasie i bedzie juz ich piec

  3. Kinga

    Nie jest w takim razie jeszcze tak zle. Mnie zaskoczylo jak szybko Lena przyjela sie na Podhalu. Pamietam, ze jak Lena sie urodzila, to jej imie juz wtwdy dosc czesto pojawialo sie w Warszawie. Ale u nas nie bylo o niej mowy. Lena budzila wsrod naszych znajomych i rodziny bardzo skrajne reakcje. Jednym sie podobala a inni mowili, ze przeciez nie ma takiej swietej :), jeszcze inni, ze to jest rosyjskie imie. Teraz, niespelna trzy lata pozniej, Leny na Podhalu wyrastaja jak grzyby po deszczu.
    Utrzymujaca sie popularnosc Julii tez mnie dziwi, ta moda trwa juz dobrych 7-8 lat.
    Najbardziej bawi mnie jednak to, ze w kwestii niespotykanych imion wygrywa moj brat, bo o Sylwiach i Dianach teraz sie nie slyszy :)