Hoarding Names In terms of upbringing, my wife, Lala, and I led mirror lives as children. I grew up with three brothers in New York and Connecticut with my dad, while Lala was raised in Colorado and Wyoming with a trio of sisters and her mother. Even though we''ve known each other for fifteen years, there are still many things I do not understand about Lala or the female species in general. I believe some simple concepts can be taught to men, such as the length of the menstruation cycle or the appreciation of a closetful of narrow footwear; we can even learn to spot and compliment a recent haircut if given the proper training. However, some of the abstract and less forensic female notions still remain puzzling to me. My wife has been nesting her whole life, even before she thought about having children. A folk artist by trade and by obsession, she''s the kind of person who believes if a week goes by without rearranging furniture, you''re halfway to the grave. When she was pregnant with our first child, the change-it-up home show occurred even more frequently than usual.
I''d come home from waiting tables at 2 a.m. to find Lala covered in paint and standing by a half-finished wall, a color swatch in each hand. "Do you like the Daredevil or the Blaze of Glory?" she''d ask, shoving the cards in my face. "They both look red to me," I''d say. "Come on, really," she''d plead, desperate for a way out of the latex corner she''d painted herself into. "Truly, I can''t tell the difference." I''m not colorblind, yet shades of the same hue just don''t move me in a decision-making direction the way a dinner menu does.
My indifference toward interior decorating goes deeper even: I simply don''t care. It''s hard for Lala to believe, but for this caveman, if I don''t trip on anything in my house and I have a place to sit that''s not wet, I feel pretty good. I''d rather have things put away and no dishes in the sink than Tiffany lampshades and a red velvet couch. Except for their lack of underwear that supports, I often envy those silly little Tibetan monks with their polished floors and black pillows. If they had cable and beer on tap, I''d be hard-pressed not to pony up and join. Lala is a determined creature, and now that a baby was on the way, the choices she offered me were no longer just about tinge and tincture. She stood on the second rung of our ladder, her brush moving across the ceiling in long strokes while her large belly kept her from getting to those hard-to-reach places. She knew better than to ask me for help, however, just as I knew better than to ask her to shout the football score to me while I was on the toilet.
"What do you think of the name Hemingway?" she called down. "Are you kidding?" I asked. "No, why?" She paused and faced me, resting her brush on the top rung. "I''m an English teacher and a writer." "So?" "What would you think of a math teacher with a kid named Hypotenuse or Pythagoras?" "You overthink things. I like the sound of it." She craned her neck and eyed her handiwork above our heads. "Hemingway Wilder.
" She sighed, hoping to gain my sympathy. "Where''d you get that name anyway?" I asked, slightly changing the subject. She shrugged. "From my list." I then became enlightened on one of the strange behaviors of the Carroll sisters and, as I found out later, other women I have met. Starting at the age of pretend weddings with younger siblings or household pets, some women keep lists of names for their future children. Even though I grew up in a household where eating in your boxers was acceptable dinner dress, I knew that women had a distinct vision of their perfect wedding, complete with seating diagrams, fabric swatches, and guesses as to which bridesmaid would most likely go down on smelly Uncle Louie. I had no idea that ever since she was running barefoot in her grandfather''s silo Lala had been hoarding names.
She had dozens for girls, fewer for boys (everyone knows boys'' names are harder, she informed me), and a handful that could fit either team or a very special sheepdog. When I was a kid, what people called me held virtually no importance, since all the Wilder boys had almost interchangeable names. The four of us have each other''s first names as middle names and vice versa. My parents had been unable to produce offspring for ten years and had almost given up until my older brother Rich was born. Since they thought he''d be their last, my mom and dad named him after my mother''s grandfather and father: Richard Edward. I popped out two years later, and I got my father''s part of the bargain: Robert (his father) Thomas (his grandfather). Out of exhaustion or distinct lack of imagination, my two younger brothers got stuck with a rearranging of what already came before: Thomas Edward and Edward Robert Wilder. Sometimes I feel that such an inbred naming process makes us southern somehow by proxy.
Lala would ask me for my opinion on what we should call our child, and most of the time I felt neutral about the choices, not unlike when she showed me swatches labeled Weeping Sky and Dodger Blue. Even I grew bored with my own dull responses, so I took on a more proactive male role by trying to predict the nicknames or associations that might plague our offspring during their undoubtedly misspent youths-to-be. "I think Bea is cute," Lala said one day while she rolled Coca-Cola Red onto our antique refrigerator. "No way," I said. "I''d look at our daughter and think of Bea Arthur. That woman gave me nightmares." "How about Macauley?" "Besides being too Irish, it would remind me of Macauley Culkin." "So?" "I don''t want my kid associated with that creepy child actor.
He''s a bit too close to Michael Jackson. I read that M.J. has a photo of Macaulay in his bathroom. Gives a whole new meaning to Home Alone ." "Jesus, nobody but you would think like that." She shook her hand disapprovingly at her academic egghead of a husband. "You never know.
" Our daughter''s name wasn''t even on Lala''s list. Her mother, Beverly, had a dream that our first child would be a girl named Poppy. We thought Beverly had been working at Grier''s furniture store, a former mortuary, for far too long, and treated her whole idea as silly. When we did find a time and way to get pregnant, however, we jokingly referred to the embryo as Poppy, and it stuck. Every other name--Addison, Grayson, Kirkum--all sounded too formal next to a fun floral forename. I even held back from sharing with Lala all the possible scenarios on the middle-school playground--Pop Goes the Weasel, Popcorn, Soda Pop, and far less pleasant things that pop for a girl during adolescence. After Poppy was born, the name game did not go away as I''d hoped. A year later, my brother Rich called to tell me that his wife just had a baby girl, and they had named her Madeleine with the middle name Joan after my late mother.
"Well, that''s rude," Lala said, slamming a wooden paint stirrer against the kitchen counter she had sanded only moments before. "Why? Did you want to use Joan on our next kid?" "Are you kidding? I hate that name." She took her fingernail and picked at a rough spot of Formica. "Now Poppy will have two cousins named Maddie. That''s just great." Lala''s older sister Kate had registered the Madeleine trademark in Seattle years before. "Just think how confused Poppy will be and how exhausting for us to use last names when talking about first cousins. I wish they''d called to check with me.
" This botched title search happened again not so long after the Maddie business when Lala''s younger sister Emily took Poppy''s middle name, Olivia, as the first for her new daughter. "I cannot believe this," Lala said when her sister broke the news over the phone. Emily admitted that the name had been on Lala''s list, but she tried to convince her it had been on Emily''s as well. The case is still pending in appellative court. "From now on," Lala told me, "we are not sharing our list with anyone. When people at work ask you which ones you like or what other names we had for Poppy, you absolutely cannot say." She paused, and her eyes lit up like the square of Goldenrod taped to the wall over our bed. "Better yet, let''s think of some phony names to throw those name snatchers off the scent!" "Like what?" "I don''t know.
" She shrugged, then looked around the house for inspiration. Rectangles of colored paper lay scattered on tables like a shrunken game of fifty-two pickup. "I got it," she said, weeding through the cards and choosing a few. "Rose, Coral, Scarlet, Indigo." "Indigo? Who the hell do you think I am, Lenny Kravitz? No one will buy that." "I don''t care. Those are the ones you''ll tell all those name stealers." "You are out of your skull.
" I waved my hand at her. "Oh am I?" she asked, wagging one spackled finger. "Tell that to your daughter when she comes to you in tears because all her cousins have the same goddamn names. We might as well move to Russia." "Russia?" "You know what I mean. Vladimir this, Boris that. I wonder if they have a problem with name theft over there. I bet you they do.
" Lala treated this name theft business like national security secrets stolen from Los Alamos Laboratory, only a Home Improvement episode from where we live. She wasn''t the only one mucking about with this moniker malfeasance. A college friend''s wife, Margaret, belongs to a mommies'' group.