Parenting

Friday, December 11, 2009

Crabmommy: The right to choose?

I believe every woman has a right to choose, but lately my belief has been seriously tested.

Crabmommy tries to steer clear of politics in this blog because who wants to hear anything serious from me? However, I'm making an exception today to question Republican VP candidate Sarah Palin's ability to use good judgment and make sound choices. With regard to baby names.

By now many women around the country have apparently been impressed with Ms. Palin's ability to juggle both Blackberry and breast pump. Yes, this lady has a whole lotta babies and yet she still finds time to shoot caribou and do a bunch of other stuff we moms can relate to.

More or less: Four women explain how they chose the number of the children they have.

But, Crabmommy readers, can you really in good conscience support a woman who deviates so seriously from the norm of tasteful baby naming when it comes to her brood? Okay, so two of her kids have names we can't make much out of: Willow and Piper. But then she's got a boy named Track. Why? Because the family loves track and field. And they have another boy named Trig -- you know, the Norse word for "strength." And then there's a daughter named Bristol, who is herself pregnant (at 17, and therefore doubly likely to call her child something dodgy too).

Are You Ready for Another Child? Take this humorous quiz and to find out if you're ready or not for number two, three or higher.

People, Crabmom is seriously worried. Are you telling me that someone who calls her kid Track is sufficiently level-headed to have her finger near the nuclear button? And I ask you, if these people get into the White House, what on earth is going to happen to baby names countrywide? Forget Utah and its weirdo baby names, our entire country would go nuts with the newly ordained Palin power monikers: as a result we'd see a nation spawning kids called Hurdle, Liverpool, and whatever-all novel names they can dream up. In short, it's going to be a baby-naming free-for-all, and I'm not sure our country can handle it.

Track. Trig. And Bristol? Bristol is a city in the UK, which means it's not even in the United States. Frankly I find that choice un-American. Which makes it unpatriotic. Indeed, one might even go so far as to say that Gov. Palin borders on immoral when it comes to this issue. All of which makes me wonder if we wouldn't be better off in a society that regulates our freedoms when it comes to baby names, protecting mothers against our own bad decisions?

What's in a name? As various monikers fall in and out of favor we can tell you the meaning, but not the motivation.

Tough call. I've been wrestling with this quandary all weekend. In the end, though, I'm staying true to my long-held principles. As such, I support Palin's right to choose, but with baby names like that she's not getting this mommy's vote.

Malia and Natasha (Sasha) on the other hand...

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From the Community…

Comments 61-62 of 62
  • Stephanie's Avatar
    Posted by Stephanie Sun Sep 14, 2008 7:23am PDT

    Baby names have been odd for many years. In college I knew a Richard Head, that's right, d---- - which is what we all called him. One of my friends dated him and said he was a complete jerk. We think Palin's baby names are bad? Let's look at some other equally odd and bad baby names - Apple, CoCo (Anyone CooCoo for Coco puffs?) River? Pax? Let's just agree that she isn't the only one and I will never understand why people give kids normal names with awful spellings, I know an Alexyis (come on,y and i?) who will likely struggle and have to explain for years why her name is spelled weird. I also know a Ryiann (nope not a girl, a boy and pronounced the same as Ryan) Why people do this to their children I will never know! I chose two somewhat normal names for my kids, Bailey and Sydney. I made songs up to teach them how to spell their names when they were toddlers. Each has the same number of letters so the song worked for both. Being a kid is hard enough without giving kids more ammo to make your child miserable in school.

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  • Sheena's Avatar
    Posted by Sheena Sun Sep 14, 2008 11:53am PDT

    LMAO! That article was hilarious! Even more hilarious, crabmommy, is how so many people are reacting to it!

    ...I can see them now, looming over their keyboards, glaring with red eyes over their reading glasses, lines forming on their 30 year old faces from pinching it so much, digging their claws into their chairs, maybe just a little drool on the side of their mouth, "...but GOD CHOSE PALIN!!!! MY PREACHER SAID SO!!!"

    its ok, CM, you know politics are the only reason these prudes can't take a joke.

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