A Big Flop in the Name of Love
There was a time in junior high when I would introduce
myself to strangers as "Andi, with an 'i'." With one simple
fib, I could wander the arcade manifesting the new identity
that the name Andi so richly implies - a tomboy, a
horseback rider with ribbons lining her bedroom walls, a
girl with neatly folded Lacoste shirts stacked in her
wicker drawers.
I could stay Andi for only so long before Teresa had
to take Andi's calls, which really confused my mother and
that was the end of that.
The point is, I felt different with my adorably
misspelled tomboy name. What if I had lived with that name
all along?
That brings me to my friend Mitzi, who claims that her
name is so unappealing as to be a romantic deterrent. "When
I meet people, they always say they had a dog named Mitzi.
A dog that died," she explains. "People ask me if Mitzi is
short for anything. Yes, it's short for Mitzi, The Girl
Whose Parents Didn't Love Her Enough to Give Her a Pretty
Name."
If it seems absurd that a person's name could
influence their perceived attractiveness, check this out. A
graduate student at MIT recently conducted a small study.
She put 24 photos on the website "Hot or Not"
(www.hotornot.com). Sure enough, the same photos with
different first names were judged more or less "hot." The
study concludes that certain vowel sounds and other factors
determine "hotness" scores, and if I could explain exactly
how, I'd be writing for Dipthongs Today. Suffice to say,
science does support Mitzi's contention. A person's name
matters.
Andi and I were right.
If your parents name you Amber, don't you become an
Amber? Skin rashes, body odor, astigmatisms, they know to
stay away from the likes of Amber. The name operates as a
talisman, warding off the evils of ugliness and puberty.
When a friend was choosing a name for her baby, she
described the blind date/board room paradox, which is that
a girl's name should seem enticing enough for a blind date
yet serious enough for the boardroom.
Few of the names I found on an Internet poll of
"Sexiest Female Names" pass the boardroom test. It's not
that women with foxy names aren't intelligent, it just
sounds odd: "And now, coming to the podium with a
PowerPoint presentation on market growth, Chantal and
Candy." If I were wrongly accused of a heinous crime, I
might not want Crystal, Brandy or Destiny representing me
in court.
On the contrary, dipping into the poll's list of
"Least Sexy Female Names" (apologies, it's not my poll)
would you want to be fixed up with my single friends
Gertrude and Bessie?
My name barely passes both tests, so I can't complain.
But it is also one of the most Catholic names on the
planet, which is strange, being Jewish and all. You try
going to Hebrew school named Teresa. My Judaic Studies
teacher was so addled she started calling me Rachel one day
and I never corrected her. I'm frequently asked, "What kind
of Jew is named Teresa?"
I don't know, the kind whose parents didn't want her
to fit in enough to call her Deborah or Naomi.
As for Mitzi, she's a comedian and might not have
bothered to be funny if she were Jennifer, Emily or Olivia.
And me? I'm an outsider wherever I go, which I can hardly
blame on my name, though it would be a pat explanation.
Would I be better adjusted and more appealing with one of
those cool, vaguely masculine, non-denominational names
that rates so well in the MIT study? Sorry, Charlie.
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