My Name
My Name
It would have never occurred
to my mother or father
to look up the meaning of the name
before giving it to me.
In the Apocrypha,
Judith slew the Asian general
to save her people.
In Ethiopia, Judith is “Yodit,”
cruel usurper of the throne
and destroyer of Axum.
These women my parents had no knowledge of
might well have scorned the “Judy” I evolved into,
despite my mother’s best intentions
of always calling me Judith Kay.
Uncle Herman called me Jude
and I loved that,
but for years,
until I married,
nobody else ever did.
I never had many nicknames,
except from my father who called me Pole Cat
and my sister who called me Jooj Pooj.
My oldest sister, Betty Jo,
knows her name
might have been prompted
by the popularity of Betty Boop
and my sister Patti Adair
has the same middle name
as her cousin Jayne
because my mother named them both,
but there is no story
for my given names.,
except that my mother liked them both.
I can draw a wading bird
using just the letters of my first name
in the correct progression,
lifting the pen off the paper only twice,
to form the eye and leg.
Yet for years,
my name was a bird
that hadn’t found its wings.
My surname was carried to America
in the hull of a ship—
when my grandmother,
born of Dutch-immigrant parents,
married to an immigrant
Dutch baker to have a son
who passed the name Dykstra on to me.
Judy Kay Dykstra
The last two letters of my first name
and my middle initial
are the first three letters of my last name,
and the remaining four letters, rearranged, spell “star.”
Nobody planned that.
Judykstra
Judykstar.
The “dyke” part of my name is self-explanatory,
and the suffix “stra” is derived from
the old Germanic word “sater,”
meaning “dweller,”
and although I’ve never lived by a seawall,
I like my name in its Dutch Shoes.
My surname
is not frequently seen
in the phonebooks
of most towns.
I’m not the one
who put it in famous places
like “Dykstra Hall” at UCLA or
in baseball statistics
on the sports page,
and it was John Dykstra
who had it engraved
on the academy award.
But it was my name written
along with my phone number
over the urinal at the library
in turquoise magic marker
by a disgruntled student,
and it took one month of late-night phone calls
from men asking, “Do you . . .?”
before a caller admitted
where he found the number
and was persuaded
to wash it off the wall.
And it was my name
written on the label of
a favorite coat left at the pier
and never returned,
so ever afterwards,
perhaps, my name
pressed against someone else’s neck.
I keep trying to change my name
into something else.
Into a bird.
Into a married name.
Drop mine, take his.
Keep mine and his,
I take his, he takes mine,
so we exchange names, both keeping both.
In the end, though, he drops mine, I keep both.
Judith Kay Dykstra-Brown. Bob Brown
My name next to his on a gravestone
in my hometown in South Dakota,
only mine open-dated.
My name on a paycheck every month for years,
and in the records of the tax collector,
then on a social security check.
For so long,
I was not yet within my name.
I wanted it to hold me,
but I couldn’t squeeze into it.
Until, finally,
my name on books and art
that told its full story.
Judy Dykstra-Brown.
I made it mine.



It’s great to read the history of your name Judy. Thanks for sharing
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Thanks, Sadje, for always being so consistent in reading things signed by this name! xo
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It’s my pleasure dear friend
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Oh, this was lovely, all through the narrative you had me wanting to share bits and piece of my own accumulative name story as we are so evenly yoked. Perfection, Judy Dykstra-Brown.
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So are you going to do so?
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Well, my real name is Jodi Herman-Dority. The Jodi I got because my mom was gonna name me Judy after her older sister, but then the TV repair man said, “You know, I’ve always liked the name Jodi.” Then first marriage I took his name, then reverted to my maiden so second time around I went for the hyphen which as I’m sure you know has drawbacks of its own. Nothing special, just made me feel a kinship of sorts as I read your beautiful poem.
And just in case you’re wondering where the Violet came from, the name is Thru Violet’s Lentz. Now think, rose colored glasses. Get it?
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I loved this bit of exploration, Judy. It is so deep with meaning, history, and the future.
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Thanks, Lou. This week has been so busy that I’ve barely had time to blog, let alone read blogs..Must get to this asap.
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This is a full study of your name – awesome.
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O ya, that Judith… She could be a little bit fierce where the good of her people was concerned! Ouch!! 😆
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An excellent exploration in a brown study
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That’s quite a deep exploration of your name!
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Wonderful! I love the DYK-star coincidence and I didn’t know what ‘stra’ meant before.
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