None of the names is familiar to me. Although I took the time in the fifteen
minutes before the oratory contest to write the names of the contestants on each
of the adjudication sheets the other judges and I have in our packages, I can’t
find the Smith-Jones* my fellow judge has assigned to first place. He has put Findley in second, and I
can’t find that contestant, either. I
can find Amanda, and Tom, and Chelsey, and Brandon, and Stephanie, though. I dig out my program from the
pile of adjudication forms, and attempt to match the speakers’ first names to
the last names I hear. Even in the
first two minutes of our discussion to finalize winners in each of the categories,
I am uncomfortable referring to people by their last name.
For my judging partner, a police officer,
wielding last names seems natural and comfortable. The officer certainly means no disrespect. Before the contest began, he chatted
with the young people in the audience. His genuine smile and evident interest in what they had to say
established an easy rapport.
So, why would using last names be so normal for him yet spur such a
visceral reaction in me?
He might be used to it, I speculate. I would wager he remembers being called
by his last name during his own training.
At that point, I ask myself
in what contexts individuals might be called by their last name. I come up with military and police recruits. Boarding schools. Sports teams. Professional athletes.
Aristocratic men (Darcy, Bingley from Pride and Prejudice). Authors. As I
have never been part of the military or the police, have never attended a
boarding school or been part of a school sports team and definitely am not (yet)
a professional athlete, a published novelist or a member of the aristocracy,
calling people by their last names is foreign to me. It’s not how I do things.
Throughout my career, I have always used
first names. I knew my students
and my colleagues as Brittany, Cindy, Tom, or Dave. Not Tremblay, Smith, Jones, or Findley. Any last names I might have used have
always been hooked up to an appellation like Miss, Mrs. or Mr. In fact, names are so sacred to me that whenever
I have been called by my last name (without appellation), I have always felt demeaned
and intimidated, as if my identity as a person had been stripped away, and I
had become a faceless object.
Which, in the end, might very well have been the intent.
Our names are inextricably linked to our
perception of ourselves. That’s
why most parents reflect a long time and weigh all possibilities for nicknames,
initials, or connotations before naming their child. That’s why
bullies often torture their victim’s name as part of their concerted attack on
the individual. Their contortion
can associate the name with unflattering, even lewd, overtones. Any attack on our name targets
our very identity, strikes at our essence, and disarms us. T. S. Eliot alludes to the
importance of our names in developing our identity in his poem, ‘The Naming ofthe Cats.’
In Old
Possum’s Book of Practical Cats, the poem that inspired Andrew Lloyd
Weber’s musical Cats, T. S. Eliot
writes that a cat needs not only its everyday name and its fancy name. A cat, Eliot reflects, needs “a name that's particular, / A name
that's peculiar, and more dignified.”
Without such a name, “how can he keep up his tail perpendicular, / Or
spread out his whiskers, or cherish his pride?” Without esteem for its name, a cat can’t be who it’s meant
to be. It can’t hold its tail up
or spread out its whiskers.
Without names that are significant and instill pride, humans can’t be
who they are meant to be either. When
they are not called by their particular, dignified names, their identity is
compromised, and they will not actualize nor showcase their innate abilities
and talents, that is, hold their tails perpendicular or spread out their
whiskers.
When I first heard those words, sitting in
the audience at Cats, I scratched
them down in the dark in the small notebook I stowed in my purse for those
occasions. I recalled them after
the oratory contest, as I reflected on why the use of last names might affect
me so deeply. In my worldview, a person’s name,
so representative of identity, is sacrosanct. Its utterance inspires growth and translates respect.
*Names in this post are fictitious.
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