Category: Seedbaby
Smiles and Snuggles
What’s in a name?
So we all have names. Some of us like ours, and some hate them. I’m somewhere in between. Laurel isn’t super unusual though I know it shocked my family when I was given it. Laurel and Hardy?… What’s her nickname going to be? Hippie parents? In school the kids could only come up with stupid rhymes comparatively. Floral. Rural. and Doral cigarettes. And big giggles when every year we were reminded that the state flower was the Mountain Laurel. I can’t help but think that the name still doesn’t suit me (too pretty for such a lifelong blunt slob of a tomboy), but it was well considered by my parents and I like that there was only one other Laurel at our school and that my middle name has a family connection. In NZ it is a bit more common I think – but with the octogenerians.
Kahurangi’s name was pretty much decided pretty early on – at least by me, and Chris wasn’t a hard sell. I loved all the various meanings, the shortened version, the sound of it, and wanted to give him an out by giving him middle names that had family meaning and English should he find the Maori to unusual or complicated to deal with (like I sometimes do when ordering and give the name “Laura” to save having to spell out/explain in loud venues). Currently he call himself Kah-foof or Ka-woo-nan-gee. But he does know his full name of Kahurangi James Lee Barr Cormack and tells it to people. Not too bad for a 2 year old. Maybe someday he’ll call himself Jim.
I’ve always loved that Chris’s name partiallly came from Christopher Robin from Winnie the Pooh, as somehow even the Shephard drawings from the books remind me of him.
So when looking at names for #2, we still weren’t sure he was going to be a boy officially. I was about 99% sure, so had erred on the side of boys names. Library trips for baby name books yielded little. Nothing seemed to sound right to me. There were a few factors in choosing one, and I was becoming increasingly stubborn which meant less and less options.
1. must like the name
2. must like sound of the name
3. must like meaning of the name
4. probably a maori name to go with Kahu’s
5. probably one that would be moderately easy to pronounce for even the American family
6. probably a shortened nickname easy to give when ordering coffees
7. no bad kiddie rhymes in Maori or in English (yes, we get Yahoo with Kahu… but if that’s the worst it gets, I’m cool with it)
8. Barr as a middle (not hyphenated) name to avoid dramas with immigration and not having the same name
9. Cormack as last name for consistency with brother
So after many hours of toiling dictionaries, websites, books, consulting people to make sure I wouldn’t offend anyone that left about 10 names and meanings, plus a list of family names for middles. In creating the list, I looked particularly at words relating to the moon. Kahu had a few very cute discussions with his in utero brother through my belly button. The baby told him “need more nappies” (which coincidently has proven true!) and that his name was “Moon Turtle” – which he then named his baby doll.
When I looked at the original due date for the baby, I saw that it was a full moon and my parent’s wedding anniversary. Maori have extensive star knowledge (which is how they navigated to NZ and engineered their planting schedules etc) and being a fan of astronomy myself, it just seemed right to look in this direction. Kahurangi’s name was ultimately chosen in my eyes for the connection it had to the skies that brought Chris and I together.
Atarau came as a potential – meaning moonlight. With further investigation, I found that many in older generations in both the US and here know the War song “Po Atarau” or “Now is the Hour”
http://folksong.org.nz/poatarau/index.html
Po atarau
e moea iho nei
e haere ana
koe ki paamamao
Haere ra
ka hoki mai ano
ki i te tau
e tangi atu nei
on a moonlit night
i see in a dream
you going away
to a distant land
farewell,
but return again
to your loved one
weeping here
It just seemed to connect all the research that both Chris and I have done on World Wars, honour those in our families that had served, and those who stayed home. And the lullaby like song in it’s various creations of lyrics remind me that even though my family is spread all over the world, that we all return back to one another.
Pronunciation especially for Americans is a bit tricky. Have a listen to the songs for help.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uPYeJM89Twc
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xzmg-_XPp0Q&feature=related&pos=6
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XgTRrrekaMo&feature=related&pos=7
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CXTjqxgjRBA
Otherwise an American close pronunciation is
Te teh
Po pole or pohl or pol (like in Poland) with soft “l”
Atarau ah-tah roeh
Chris put up his earlier blog post based on cryptic notes I had made of family lineage. Subsequent corrections of family connections to middle names have been made.
So Te Po Atarau William Creed Barr Cormack, I hope that sometime you’ll ask me why we chose this name for you, and we can sit down and tell you about the long hours we spent making it just right for you. A special name for a special boy.
…and then you can call yourself Bill.
All dressed up and ready to go out
One week on
Back at home
Everyone is back at home healthy and happy. Our first post natal midwife visit should be happening in the next 10 mins or so.
Tons of photos on our gallery
Still working on getting a routine going, and catching up on sleep, but it’s all going pretty well.
Update from the Hospital
After a lot of people asking we thought we should tell you that Te Po Atarau’s can be shortened to Ata. (Which can mean morning or light)
Mum and baby are both doing fine. Ata is pretty quiet when he is a awake, but chatters away when he is asleep. He is feeding well and is pretty alert and happy.
Te Po Atarau has arrived
On perhaps the coldest day of the year so far, son number two decided it would be a great time to arrive. So after Laurel woke up at 4am, by 5.30am we decided it was time to head into the hospital. By 7am, Laurel was 6cm dilated and at 10.29am Te Po Atarau William Creed Barr Cormack was born.
After a few false starts earlier when he decided to really get going he sure didn’t muck around. He was 4.24kg (not a small fella) with all the requisite fingers and toes.
What does the name translate as?
Po
1.(verb) (-ngia) To set (of the sun)
2. (noun) darkness,night
Atarau
(noun) moonlight, moon
So Te Po Atarau – Moonlight night
William
William Haberfeld – First Immigrant to NZ on the Cormack side
William Hallam – Great Great Grandfather (Chris’s Mothers side)
William P White – Laurel’s Great Great Grandfather
William Aitken Johnston – Great Great Grandfather
Creed
William Creed, great great great Grandfather
Grandfather’s middle name
Kahurangi has met his little brother, and told everyone to be quiet because he is sleeping.
Updated
Fixing William P White.
Update 2
Adding some more William information
False alert
Our new son is proving to be a contrary one already. Last night he pretended that he was ready to arrive, pretty much all night, then decided nope, not yet. That plus the, I won’t show you what gender I am until you have decided you want to wait and be suprised, stunt he pulled already leads us to believe he is going to follow in his big brothers footsteps.
We are back on wait and see mode again now, hopefully he either arrives or doesn’t and Laurel can get a good nights sleep, no more false labour though.
Only a month to go
The due date is June 6, and going on our experience with Kahurangi that means anytime from now. We still don’t know if a boy or a girl will be arriving, we have one more scan but have decided if we haven’t known this long we might as well wait.
This time around Laurel has her bag packed already and a birth plan written out, so there should be less of me running around like a mentalhead throwing random things into a bag.
Wellington Hospital has a bunch of brand new birthing suites, well a few months old now, which is good because they will have discovered and fixed all the little glitches (just like a software project) that crept in during the build.