In the Wheelhouse
Over Christmas Day dessert, our daughter
handed us the sonogram. Our first grandchild
would be due in June and be a boy.
We began riffing through names
but our top five appeared
on all the recent lists of popularity –
so, no, we had to keep digging.
What’s more, our daughter had requirements:
the name must resist being shortened,
should flow into the one-syllable last name,
cannot shimmer with religious vibes
nor possess literary, cinematic, or Disney ties
nor be unisex or the name of anyone in their circle.
I presented the sonorous names Django, Jasper, and Orlando,
each with a short “a” rhyming with the last name,
and the trochaic Lonzo.
All choices were considered odd.
I suggested playground names, like Nico and Leo,
workspace names, like Hamilton and Sebastian,
names that roll softly from the tongue like Elias.
Elijah in conjunction with the clipped last name
recommended itself for the musicality
of a pair of iambs, matching short A sounds,
a consonance of Ls,
and the way the soft J and hard K
in the surname balanced each other.
Elijah was not an option.
Then I consulted the alphabet,
offered names with ancient energy like Quentin and Merlin,
lyrical names with a gentle masculinity:
Ezekiel, Hugo, Micah, Hosea, Ezra, and Luca.
I considered player names from World Cup rosters
and pulled the entertaining Cocanut from last month’s local primary ballot.
You can guess our daughter’s response.
Having emptied my stash
of impeccable names,
I stepped back, finally.
The future had already chosen.
17 thoughts on "In the Wheelhouse"
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I LOVE to your names! What a fun poem and very well articulated.
Great prosaic poem! And I’ve the ending, how you leave us hanging.
Beautiful poem that weaves the complexities and love of family. Your descriptions held intrigue from beginning to end.
I love the lists of names , so musical.
The names just sing! The poem as a whole is fantastic, especially how the poem lands to keep us guessing. Yes!
This is good from A to Z.
Enjoyable to read
and so well Written
Very enjoyable read! I love your suggestion of Jasper! But as a mama, I know that mama had to find just the right one for herself! 🙂
Funny!
Delightful—a rare longer poem from the master miniaturist.
All your suggestions are wonderful, I think—except maybe Django, which might have carried some fairly heavy baggage for your grandson to explain…
This is a very fun one!
What fun and well done! Takes me back to when I was a pre-teen and my first cousins were producing and I used to pepper them with lists of suggested names. Luckily they had the good sense to ignore me, but I agree with Kevin about your suggestions.
Yes, we poets do love words and sounds. This was a delight to read, but are you going to tell us what name was chosen??
Your names and logic behind them were spot on. I loved them all! But such is the way of our children. They have minds of their own. To the future! And congratulations!
DELIGHTFUL! “Elijah was not an option.” I could not stop laughing at this point. I love this journey- and it brings back a similar memory with my daughter, Mia. And she ruled there, too. (Is Quinn an option?! 😉 (I am curious about the name!)
And congratulations!
i say let the baby chose his name . . . love all the places you took me in your poem!!! how wonder filled, thank you.
Congratulations, Gaby! What a gift for your daughter to hand you over Christmas dessert. Delightful read!