Happy birthday [livejournal.com profile] idlerat!!

This popped into my head on the way home the other day...does anybody else know what name they would have been called if they were the opposite sex, and if you do,

Do you think about it?

I asked my roommate--she would have been called Eric. She also knew her alternate girl name, Yvonne. Apparently she and her sisters were all potential Eric/Yvonnes, but all were girls and none looked like an Yvonne (also Mom couldn't decide on the correct pronunciation). Personally, I think one of her sisters could have been an Yvonne, on her and the other one it would be purely quirky.

But it was more interesting looking at her and imagining her alternate boy self, Eric. (Her father was also partial to Thor, and I've got to say she dodged a bullet there. Ethnic heritage aside...whoa. That's a lot to live up to.) The weird thing is, I can kind of see it--the Eric, that is, not the Thor. Now I can look at her and somehow imagine this boy version called Eric.

The one alternate girl name my mother once mentioned for me was Miranda, Mandy (not Randy) for short. I can't really see it--my roommate said (and I agree) she could see more as Amanda than Miranda. I was friends with a Miranda growing up. We called her neither Mandy nor Randy, but Mirn (sometimes Mirnie). So when I think of my name being Miranda, it's more like an odd thing, rather than a name I could have had.

If I was a boy I would have been Mark. I asked my mother this probably when I was a kid and it always stayed in my head. Mark somehow holds out all these tantalizing possibilities, you know? Maybe I still would have been friends with my roommate and we'd have been Eric and Mark. (Although maybe not, as we first met in college and Mark and Eric wouldn't have gone to Smith...)

Mark. It's not a name that really means anything to me beyond this. I had one in my class growing up about which I have no strong feelings. He played the saxophone. On the one hand the idea that this would have been my name had the chromosomes worked out just a little bit differently is a big deal. On the other hand...it's not. It's not my name, it's got no connection to me. But it does!

Anybody else ever ask your parents this question? I know [livejournal.com profile] adela711 had a name change soon after she was born. My father still calls my cousin Matthew because "he was supposed to be called that" even though the man's been Jeffrey for over 30 years. At the same time, I know why he does it. Because while he looks like a Jeff he could be a Matthew, you know? It does fit him. So as much as I want to just laugh at my father for doing this, there's this ghostly Matthew in my head too--and I wasn't even around when his name was being planned. I heard it once and thought, yes, that works.

So Brother Magpie would have been Mark. What would he have been like? Any one else ever think about this? Especially slashers? Is it more of a girl thing to ask this question and wonder about it, or do guys tend to know about this too?
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From: [identity profile] go-back-chief.livejournal.com


I know it took a while for my parents to decide, and they had many different opinions. My mother's cousin chimed in to, suggesting a bunch of Spanish names which my mum laughed at, and even though I think they are pretty, I have to admit that they would have sounded ridiculous to my Norwegian surname, and also together with my sister's typical Norwegian name. The name I almost got, was Emma. My best friend thinks I'm lucky to have gotten the name I've got because she doesn't think I'm "an Emma", but I sort of disagree. It's not my name, but I don't think it would have been too far off. In fact, I've given the name to a character based on my child-self, and I think it's the best one I could have chosen for her.

My mum says that I might have been "Ola", "Olof" or "Erik" if I'd been a boy. Probably both Erik and Olof, she said. And if that had been the case, I have no doubt, I'd have selected Erik, myself, because Olof was NOT a popular name for my generation, while Erik was pretty common, and not remarcably ugly, either (which I think Ola is). I think Erik might have suited me, the way Emma does. It's not me, the way my real name is, but it is something I could have been, not too far out of the blue.
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From: [identity profile] sistermagpie.livejournal.com


Emma is one of those names I suspect I could be too. It's the same type name as my real one. I think my roommate's father's family is from the same background as you-I could see his family having an Olaf. (I think there's a Sven in the family, which is just relentlessly Swedish to my ears!)

Eric/Erik seems to be a very popular almost-boy name around here!
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