nadriel: (Default)
nadriel ([personal profile] nadriel) wrote2003-09-03 08:18 am

The power of names...

As promised a more cheerful post. And one of my occasional pseudo-philosophical, thoughtful ones as well.

When you name an object, you put certain expectations upon it, and, to a certain degree, you define it.

Does the same apply to people? For example, my middle name is Peter, which means Rock. I have certainly rocklike qualities to my personality (endurance and so on). Now, the question arises, is this just a coincidence, were my parents somehow inspired, or did the name somehow shape me?

To further add to things, I found out at a fairly early age what my names all meant. Does this mean that I have been, consciously or unconsciously, trying to live up to my name?

Answers on a postcard...
ext_28008: (Default)

Hmm...

[identity profile] mapp.livejournal.com 2003-09-03 02:12 am (UTC)(link)
Mark is meant to be derived from Mars, the Roman God of War. I knew this from quite an early age, and I think i've managed to turn out the opposite..

[identity profile] joysilence.livejournal.com 2003-09-03 04:19 am (UTC)(link)
Well I have found my name to be laughable in it's inadequacy; I'm really not the most feminine person in the world and here I am called Daisy. Even my psychiatric nurse agreed it was too girly for me. My middle name is Cordelia,from the play "King Lear", which is also wrongety-wrong wrong wrong as, though I am the youngest of my father's three daughters, I was not kind to my dad at all. And he died instead of me dying.

[identity profile] nachtherr.livejournal.com 2003-09-04 02:27 am (UTC)(link)
This is a postcard.

Yes.

[identity profile] nachtherr.livejournal.com 2003-09-05 02:08 am (UTC)(link)
Another postcard:

Yes, consciously or unconsciously you are trying to live up to a label ascribed to you by someone else. A plan for failure :o)