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Archive for Your turn! – Page 4

How I Met Your Father

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (1)·   February 14th, 2008

In honor of Valentine’s Day, a slightly sappy post and a challenge for you to write on the same topic.

How did you meet your spouse/partner/significant-other?

In college, a grad student I knew was actually doing interesting research on how couples tell the stories of their lives, and how that relates to their overall happiness and well-being. The question was less about the content and more about how the story was told. I’ll never forget that, and so I love to hear people tell their stories. Here’s mine, and beware, there are quite a number of players involved.

So, I moved to Boston in the summer of 2000 to start grad school. Barely knew anyone, as the rest of my friends moved mainly to Chicago or New York. But there was one person, a sorority sister a year older than me who I didn’t know terribly well. Mallory moved to Boston in the early fall, and we quickly latched onto one another in a “hey, you’ll be my friend!” kind of way.

Mallory had a friend from high school, Guido, who was taking continuing education classes at one of the nearby Boston colleges. His email address at said college was mistakenly subscribed to the listserv for the college’s student theater program. He ignored the misdirected emails and didn’t bother trying to unsubscribe. Then, one day, Ryan sent an email on this listserv, asking for anyone and everyone to come help hang lights. “Bring your friends,” it said. Well, Guido remembers that Mallory used to do theater in college, and is trying to meet people. He forwards Ryan’s email, and Mallory starts helping out in the college theater.

The fact that Ryan is no longer an undergrad has not stopped him from designing lighting for and directing student shows, so it’s not any more unusual that Mallory shows up. And brings her friend, me. I had nothing else to do. One night, Mallory and I met Dave. Another several-years-past-graduation guy still hanging around the theater. We called him “hottie Dave” (not “haughty”). Well, I stopped going, but Mallory continued to hang around the student theater at the college that wasn’t hers with guys who only used to go there. Another of those guys was Dave’s roommate. M.

So, one night, Ryan is having his theater buddies over. Mallory invites me to tag along. I remembered hottie Dave and wondered if he’d be there. He wasn’t. But M was. Love at first sight? Not exactly. I was a little drunk (it doesn’t take much) and was reliving my undergraduate days by singing along (loudly) to the South Park Movie. Charming. So, M’s first impression of me was, “who is that annoying drunk girl, and why won’t she stop singing?”

Lucky for me, Mallory invited me over to her house a few weeks later for some pre-holidays takeout with Dave and M. I was less drunk, we flirted, we hit it off. Around the new year we started emailing, and by Martin Luther King Day, we had rapidly become an item.

As a funny addendum, Mallory and I became roommates that summer. M lived with Dave. Mallory started dating Dave, and we were suddenly roommates dating roommates. Two years later, Mallory and Dave got married. A year and a half after that, it was me and M.

And we still sometimes sing along to the South Park Movie, just for old time’s sake. Probably shouldn’t sing those songs in front of the kids, though.

Comments (1)
Categories : Holidays, My beloved, Your turn!
Tags : Valentine's Day

Names from all over

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (0)·   January 25th, 2008

I can’t say I’m completely surprised that my post about baby name criteria struck a nerve. Coming up with a name that will stick with someone for their entire life is a pretty major task, and I think only a fool goes about it lightly. But the best part about that post is that I got to read other people’s stories about their own process. I think it’s so interesting to hear about the different routes people take, or even someone who goes through nearly the same thought process as I did, yet ends up someplace completely different.

Also, glad to know we weren’t alone in referring to the twins as “the boy” or “little girl” for the first couple of weeks. I had felt kind of bad about that one at the time.

So, go back and check the comments for that post, or visit these cool cats who blogged about it on their own sites:

High Heels and High Chairs, on how they went about a name for Peanut.
Cynthia, on her daughter’s name, followed by identical twin boys.
You’re Watching Adelevision, and how it came to be that we’re not watching Alice-vision.

And, from their archives,
Laura’s thoughts, before she found out she was having fraternal boys!
Eva, and why her blog is “Sarah and Jordan Updates”

——-
Enough procrastinating, time to pack for tomorrow’s flight to Florida with the kids in tow. I’ll have internet access while I’m gone, but I’ll also have family, so posting will likely be sparse. See you on the flipside!

Comments (0)
Categories : Blogging, Your turn!
Tags : baby names

A baby by any other name

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (7)·   January 20th, 2008

There’s a fun article in Sunday’s Boston Globe about how hard it is to name your baby. All of the rules we set up for ourselves, how judgmental we are of other people’s choices, and how daunting it can be to pick a “label” that will stick with your child forever, before you’ve even met him/her. It struck a lot of notes with me because, though we settled on our kids’ names pretty early, I had an awful lot of criteria to satisfy. (And, I admit, I have sometimes strong opinions on other people’s choices…) Among my own requirements:

  • Nothing in the top 10 for popularity the previous year – much as I love names like Emma, I didn’t want my daughter to be one of 6 Emmas in the first grade.
  • Nothing that felt too “trendy” – a less clear-cut criteria, but one of those “I’d know it if I saw it.”
  • No “J” names – Our last name starts with a J, but it’s correctly pronounced like an H. I knew a hard J name would be death sentence for ever having the last name pronounced properly. This did rule out a lot of boy names, and I admit that I was glad to find out we weren’t having two boys, because I’m not sure we could’ve agreed on two boy names.
  • No “H” names – because, on the off chance someone said our last name right, it would be some annoying alliteration. Thankfully, not a lot of “H” names that either of us liked, and Hannah was already used by a cousin (yes, with the same last name… we didn’t love it.)
  • Careful with the ethnicity – though our last name is Hispanic, we’re also raising our kids Jewish, I’m Irish and French, and the twins are (percentage-wise) more German than anything else. A Spanish-sounding name might have matched the last name, but it would not have felt particularly authentic. An Irish name would just be a weird match. Etc, etc.
  • Straightforward spelling and pronunciation – again with the last name, ours is misspelled and mispronounced more often than not. If they’re going to have to correct people on their last name their whole lives, they might as well have a relatively easy first name. And no substituting a “y” where there should be an “i” or anything else silly like that. (I’m looking at you, Addysen.)
  • No “matchy” twin names – I didn’t want their names to rhyme, have the same first letter, or otherwise be a pre-fab matched set. Though it was fun to joke that they’d be Oprah and Harpo.

And that’s just the beginning. Plenty of other names were ruled out because of weird associations, people we knew, etc, just as anyone else might do. The names had to be pretty classic, not sound silly with our last name, not spell something rude with the initials… it’s almost amazing we came up with anything.

M picked Daniel early on in the game, actually a couple of weeks before the “big” ultrasound. I was considering it at the same time, but was not as convinced as M. What about Benjamin? Samuel? Nathan? No, M would not be swayed. Daniel fit the bill. His middle name is after M’s beloved late grandfather, Paul. We always knew that our son, whenever we had one, would have that middle name.

Rebecca was originally Sarah. I liked Sarah enough, but it was a little more commonly used, and had a notable lack of built-in nicknames. I wasn’t satisfied. We had a few more girl names on the list (Molly, Miriam, Katherine), but Rebecca seemed to fit the bill. Classic/biblical without being overtly “Jewish,” multiple nickname possibilities (I think she’ll end up a “Becca,” but we’ll see), and even a strong woman in the bible (who had twins! It was meant to be.). I was sold. Her middle name is my mom’s name, and my middle name: Anne.

Both names satisfied me on the popularity/ease of use criteria. While they’re well-known names that are easy to spell and pronounce (I talked M out of Rebekah), they aren’t super popular at the moment. Babycenter.com even said that, in 2007, Rebecca was one of the fastest-falling names on the chart. Daniel is also on a downward trend (check the usage graphs on Baby Name Wizard). Neither is even close to the top 20. A good thing, in my book.

We kind of went half-Jewish on the naming traditions. The traditional thing to do would be to name someone after a family member who had recently passed away, which we did in the case of Daniel’s middle name. It’s also considered bad luck to name a child after someone who is still living, which we did anyways, in the case of Rebecca’s middle name.

We also were not really of the “wait to see the baby” variety. Mostly because we kind of think that all newborns look like either Yoda or Winston Churchill (or kind of like a skinny plucked chicken). But we still didn’t tell anyone which names we’d chosen until after they were born, just in case we had a last minute change of heart or stroke of brilliance. In the end, the names seemed to work just fine. Though I remember it took a few weeks for me to truly associate the name with this tiny baby. We didn’t always call them by their names at first, not because the names we picked felt wrong, but almost because any name felt kind of odd. Ah well. We’re over that.

So, all of you new parents out there (especially you fellow bloggers), how did you decide on your child(ren)’s names? What were your “rules”? What names were ruled out, and what names were close runners-up? Tell the story in the comments here, or post it on your blog. I can’t wait to find out if you’re all as anal-retentive as I am. No? Hrm. Maybe it’s just me…

Comments (7)
Categories : Your turn!
Tags : baby names

Say Hello!

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (28)·   January 10th, 2008

Stolen from Sarah & the Goon Squad, though it’s other places too, it’s DE-LURKING DAY!

My sitemeter says this little blog gets visited 70+ times per day. Surely, I can manage more than 10 comments. So, there’s your challenge, dear readers. All of you very nice people who drop by, but never say anything, speak up! Please say hi in the comments today. Don’t be shy! I promise, you don’t have to say anything particularly witty or original. Just string together a couple of words and make me feel loved. :-)

Comments (28)
Categories : Blogging, Your turn!
Tags : delurker day

Place Your Bets

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (10)·   March 24th, 2007

With el grande ultrasound only five little days away, and in the time-honored tradition of my crazy family, I think it’s time to take bets on what we’ll learn next Thursday, gender-wise. Unlike my usual family events, there’s no money involved in this one. Just a virtual pat on the back if you guess right. Maybe a little blog shout-out. I know, that’s some incentive, huh? If I could think of a way to do it, I’d make it into March-Madness-esque brackets (I’m currently in 5th place at work for the men, 5th and rising for the women), but I don’t think that’s going to happen. So, here are the options:

  • One boy, one girl
  • Two boys
  • Two girls
  • One (or both) will be too shy and not show us “the goods.”
  • Stealth triplet
  • And, for the tiebreaker, your best guess at their combined current weight. For reference, on the day of the ultrasound, I’ll be 17 weeks, 6 days.

Prior to opening the polls, you should know that I’m voting boy/girl (wishful thinking?), husband is voting boy/boy, and my cousin Mike says girl/girl (which is what he had a year and a half ago, so he might be biased). We’re also relatively certain they’re fraternal, but not 100% sure.

Polls are open, people! Place your bets!

Comments (10)
Categories : Pregnancy, Ultrasounds, Your turn!
Tags : gender
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