What can I write about as March begins when I’m not a fan of modern politics (thank God Super Tuesday is over; at least voting didn’t take long) or basketball (when will March Madness be over??)?
I could talk about how my oldest brother breaking a hip makes me feel old, except that would make me feel even older with every word, and I prefer the age of 6, thank you very much. But when he fell, he tripped over his guitars, so that’s at least a little cool. Still painful, though. At last report, the guitars were fine, but Mitch needed surgery.
I could talk about people who hold grudges, and who regularly wildly misinterpret what they read and hear, so much so that it leads to them holding more grudges. I could do that, but it would just continue the cycle, and I’m tired. Some of these people are the ones who scream “Democrat hoax” about a virus with no vaccine that’s killed at least nine in the U.S. so far and that cares even less for politics than I do (apparently it’s possible). It’s exhausting.
This is the thought process I go through when I have no idea what to write. As the paragraph above so clearly states, it’s exhausting. Especially when you feel obliged to be both informative and entertaining.
No wonder I haven’t gotten a lot of sleep lately.

I can’t believe somebody would include “doo-doo” in their name. Sheesh.
Image found on Team Jimmy Joe.
But trust Apple News’ aggregated newsfeed to get me back to something I love talking about: words. In this case, names. Years ago when I first started at the newspaper, some colleagues and I kept a funny-name list. I finally tracked it down the other day and was still amazed that someone would name their child Shafungus.
Some of us have names that give a nod to family history, like a child being named after her great-great-great-grandmother. At least a few of the names on that list at the paper, like Condorous Breedlove, were passed through multiple generations. My name ultimately came, my mom told me, from a baby book and one of her high school friends. However, she often told me growing up that, had I been a boy, she and Daddy might have given in to my great-grandma’s wish to have a child named after her husband’s father, my great-great-grandpa.

Try to name me Christopher Columbus, I dare ya. You’ll be rewarded with full stinky diapers on the regular.
I would have been Christopher Columbus Looper. I hope she was joking, but you never know.
Even though my home state is not that great for women, according to a recent study from WalletHub (we ranked 49th overall, and dead last in health and safety), I’m really glad I was born one. Although no one in my immediate family got saddled with the whole moniker, two of my nephews have Christopher in their names. Neither use it.
Sorry, Granny Gressett.
But there are worse things to be named. People have the tendency to laugh at unusual names, and you just have to wonder what the parents were thinking. Maybe they were following the advice of Johnny Cash’s “Boy Named Sue” to toughen up their child for the inevitable hard life to come (maybe it wouldn’t be so hard if you weren’t so bad at naming kids).
I’m all for having fun, but do you really want to send your college-graduate kid out on job interviews with a name that sounds like a joke? Random Chance? Espn? Really? But I guess you could always name the child after whatever profession you want him or her to follow. Rob Amen, now digital content leader for the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review’s TribLive website, was once a religion writer. (I so want him to have had a religion column called The Amen Corner.) Steve Drown ended up as the Water Division chief at the Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality before retiring in the last decade. And who better than Joanne Howl to become a veterinarian?
I’m pretty sure my ancestor Hose Looper was not a fireman, and my cousin Rusty Pipes is not a plumber … but wouldn’t it be great if they were?
I’ve often joked to friends that when I’m queen of the world, parents will have to run kids’ names by me so that no child ever has to suffer the indignity of being named Moronica, Orangello or, God help us, Talula Does the Hula From Hawaii. That’s pretty much the only thing for which you’ll find me advocating Big Brother-type moves. I’m not a fan of kids being picked on because of their names.
Some names have been placed off-limits in various countries, for very good reason.
Don’t, for example, try to name your daughter Nutella in France, as being named after a name-brand Italian cocoa-hazelnut spread “can only lead to teasing or disparaging thoughts.” Or the urge to spread her on toast. And definitely don’t name your child Brfxxccxxmnpcccclllmmnprxvclmnckssqlbb11116 (pronounced “Albin,” because why not) and tell the court the name is a “pregnant, expressionistic development that we see as an artistic creation.”
Sure, be creative, but this is ridiculous.
The parents of Talula et al. saw their daughter put under court guardianship in New Zealand in 2008 so that she could change her name, with the judge saying such a bizarre name “makes a fool of the child and sets her up with a social disability and handicap, unnecessarily.” Other names mentioned in the judge’s ruling included Sex Fruit, Violence and Number 16 Bus Shelter. New Zealand prohibits names that “might cause offense to a reasonable person,” and encourages parents to remember that their children must live with the name. Pity poor Number 16 Bus Shelter. Makes me wonder if, like a guy I worked with one summer, the kid was named for where he or she was conceived.
Ew. Double ew.

Pretty much every day with Luke. Rotten sweet boy. I still miss him.
Illustration by my favorite artist/cartoonist, John Deering.
Lucifer has faced outright bans, such as in Iceland. It’s almost like people don’t think you should name your child after demons or fallen angels (no Beelzebub for you, sorry). Though my dearly departed furkid Luke was often called Lucifer by some who’d faced his wrath, his given name was Lucas, which means “light-giving.” I have no idea what name means “bruise-giving.” Or “blood-letting.” Or “bitey-scratchy.”
Celebrity parents are notorious for bad names. Frank Zappa had Moon Unit, Diva Muffin and Dweezil (Ahmet got off easy). Jason Lee has Pilot Inspektor. Kim Kardashian West has North West. Rob Morrow’s daughter is named Tu.
All of those are bad, but I have to call out Penn Jillette for what he named his daughter: Moxie CrimeFighter. Moxie is now 14, so isn’t driving yet; when she was born, her dad said, “We chose her middle name because when she’s pulled over for speeding she can say, ‘But officer, we’re on the same side. My middle name is CrimeFighter.’”
Penn, Teller will be taking over naming duties. So sayeth the queen of the world.
But the queen of the world is a generous queen, so please enjoy this waving cat. If it were Luke, the middle finger probably would have been extended if he didn’t like you. He was devilish like that.


I once had a tom cat that I named Gladys so he’d learn to fight. It worked.
Growing up in Vermont, my birth name was Arbuckle, which I’ve only recently learned is a mountain range in Oklahoma. No relation. When my mother remarried, I took my stepdad’s name, Babbie, which turns out to be a very small town in Alabama. I visited there a couple of years ago, and nobody knows where the name came from.
My stepdad was an avid bowler. He would write Bab on the score sheet, leading half his friends to call him Bob Babbie. I thought that was so cool, that in my name change, I chose Robert as a middle name, thinking I’d soon be known as Bob Babbie. However, whenever I moved to a new town or new school and people asked my name, I’d say “Earl.” The Bob thing just didn’t work out, though I named my son Aaron Robert, and he named his son Henry Robert. Finally, I had the good sense to marry the former Miss Roberts.
Game of the Name, I guess.
LikeLike
For a while when I was Channel 4, we had two Bobs. The way we’d differentiate between them when talking about them was to say them in different ways. For the reporter, it was a clipped Bob. For the photographer, it was a drawn-out country Boooob.
At the paper, we had a columnist who added Bob to people’s names. When he was at another paper years earlier, he and another reporter started the Bob Group, a group of writers at the paper who worked together to improve their reporting and writing. He started a similar group here, and gave members name plates for their desks with their name plus Bob. My Brenda-Bob sign is on the front of my desk.
All that to say I now dub thee Cousin Earl-Bob! 🤠
LikeLike
Thank you, Cuz. I am now complete.
LikeLike
You shouldn’t give math problems to someone named “Violence” because violence solves nothing.
LikeLiked by 1 person
🥁
LikeLike
Speaking of France, did you know that “Laurence” is considered to be a perfectly acceptable name for women in France?
LikeLike
I did not know that.
LikeLike
In Sunday’s paper I noted the names Ember, Cannell, Grayson were all female names. And Sawyer.
LikeLike
Cannell is the odd one out there for me. I can’t imagine that for a girl. Or anybody, really. 😉
LikeLike
Just read your column on the name game. My last book has a LONG section of names I collected from my readings. Even with the list out there, I can’t help but transcribe those odd names I see in the paper. Your premise that began something like “What can I write about today gives me an idea (when I need it) for my weekly general interest column in the Amity Southern Standard. Loved you column. Now, if you allow, I’ll love your blog. I have a prose blog and a poetry blog but they are on blogspot.
LikeLike
Thanks, Pat! 🥰
LikeLike
The main reason my father named me “Laurence” was the fact that his name was George William Gray III and his family all called him “Junior”. My father didn’t like being called “Junior” and when he learned that his wife had given birth to a boy, my father decided that my name would be anything but “George William Gray IV”.
LikeLike
Besides “L-A-U-R-E-N-C-E”, I have seen my name spelled: “L-A-W-R-E-N-C-E”; “L-A-W-R-A-N-C-E”; “L-A-W-A-R-A-N-C-E”; “L-A-W-E-R-E-N-C-E”; “L-A-W-E-R-A-N-C-E”; and “L-A-U-R-A-N-C-E”. I guess this is an example of what you could call “Creative Spelling”? I spell my name “Laurence” because that is how my father spelled it on my birth certificate.
LikeLike