Saturday, November 07, 2009

What's in a Name

Many women fill out a lot of paperwork to change their names after marriage.

When my husband Larry and I married more than 25 years ago, I kept my name. I'm a Falion, he's a Savoie; a point of pride, for professional reasons and mostly one tiny effort to preserve and honor a family name in danger of dying out. The other day Larry sent this to me.

It made me smile. I did a little dance. I felt a little vindicated!!

(Reported by CNN from Oprah.com)

Lots of folks have Sunday morning rituals -- church, pancakes, watching football. I turn to the wedding pages.

Every Sunday, I open up The New York Times to check out the wedding announcements.

They call that "the sports section for women," which is annoying, because it presupposes that, because I'm a chick, (a) I don't like sports and (b) I love weddings. To which I say, (a) I know what a hat trick is and (b) wedding invitations are just bills written in calligraphy.

No: I check out the wedding announcements because I want to see how many women change their names.

I am freshly gobsmacked every single Sunday morning when I see that about half the women -- mostly under 35, all women with careers, all women who chose to submit their announcement to the putatively liberal New York Times --are electing to give up their identity.

What would Lucy Stone say? She was a 19th-century suffragist who was the first American woman to revert to her birth name after marriage. She even had to chastise one Susan B. Anthony by writing to Suze, "A wife should no more take her husband's name than he should hers." Stone's followers -- women who refused to change their names upon marriage -- were called Stoners.

Today only about 20 percent of American women are Stoners. In other words, 80 percent of women change their identities -- I mean, names -- upon getting married.

It makes me wish we were a more progressive country like...Iran. Yes, Iran, where Muslim women keep their names for life. So must women, by law, keep their names in Belgium, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Chile, Malaysia, Korea...I could go on, but I really like the way they do it in Spain.

There, people have two surnames -- their father's and their mother's. When they have a child, she receives the first surname from the father and the second surname is the first surname of the mother, and the parents choose whether the father's or the mother's surname goes first, although this order must be the same for all their children.

If that was a bit confusing, it's just because they use the metric system.

Names are our identity. They matter. Think about it: What does the Witness Protection Program do when they want you to disappear? They make you keep your first name and change your last name. When someone illegally assumes someone else's name, we say an identity's been stolen; when someone legally assumes someone else's name, we say...you're married.

Let's cut through the most platitudinous argument: "A family shares a name." Um, nuh-uh. Did your grandmother have the same last name as you? Was she still your Nana? Conversely, does having the same last name mean you'll always stay a family? Ask the Gibsons or the McCartneys or the McGreeveys or...

What's in a name? You tell me...

• Would you want to lay down seven grand to buy a wedding dress from Vera Becker? (Vera Wang?)

• How about listen to a song from Mariah Cannon, Jennifer Anthony or Barbra Brolin? (Mariah Carey, Jennifer Lopez, Barbra Streisand)

• Read a cover story on Angie Pitt? (Angelina Jolie)

• Netflix an old film with Elizabeth Hilton Wilding Todd Fisher Burton Warner Fortensky? (Elizabeth Taylor, natch)

• Or get your nightly news from Katie Monahan? (Katie Couric)

• Gloria Bale needs her surname like a fish needs a Steinem. (Gloria Steinem)

• And does the name Sonia Noonan suggest an "extraordinary journey"? (Sonia Sotomayor)

By the way, my wedding announcement was in The New York Times. When I submitted it, I wrote, "The groom is keeping his name." The Times did not publish that sentence. I guess they thought it was a typo.




Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Mark Your Calendar


The Mason Holiday Craft Show and Home Tour is coming soon. Thursday-Saturday, November 12-14, 9-9 Thurs and Fri. and 9-4 Sat.

I'll be back at the Iron Pig Antiques on Columbia Road with gorgeous new jewelry designs.

Keep following this blog for more information and a peek at my new designs.

Give well! Spend Less!

Monday, October 19, 2009

World Premeire


SISTERS a staged reading of a play about the conflict between love, family, faith, and fame will premiere at Riverwalk Theatre, Sunday, November 8, at 7 p.m. One night only. Free

Louisiana, 1944; a young opera singer must make the ultimate sacrifice. Gabrielle is on the verge of a career breakthrough in the lead role of Lucia di Lammermoor with the Metropolitan Opera when she must make an excruciating choice.

Featuring a stellar cast of local performers: Addiann Hinds, Kat Cooper, Evan Pinsonnault, Mara Schaberg, Bill Shipley, Bill Henson, Mark Zussman, Colleen Bethea, Lindsay Palinsky, Theresa Spisak, Sierra Olsen

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Hot! Potato


This is my Ah Ha moment about the baked potato. Why did my baked potatoes never taste as good as the restaurant ones? I've wondered that for years. Was it the foil? Was it the oven? Was it the potato?

Last night after having a wonderful dinner with the GNO group, I carried home delicious left overs for lunch today.

As I was enjoying said leftovers, I was still asking myself, why was this potato so good?

I took action.
Went online and googled restaurant style potatoes and found the answer!

Ah Ha! It's the oil and the salt. So tonight, a little experiment.
I oiled my potatoes with olive oil, salted them with sea salt and baked them the proper way, in the oven for more than an hour.
Voila! Restaurant potatoes; crispy, chewy skins with a rich deep flavor!

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Bath Massacre by Arnie Bernstein


Arnie Bernstein has written a wonderful book about the Bath Massacre. Check it out. He will be at the Grand Rapids Library this Saturday (10-4) along with Dave Cullen (Columbine) and Mardi Link (Isadore's Secret) for a book reading.

Below is my review for Amazon of his book.

5.0 out of 5 stars Bath Massacre, October 14, 2009
By Jane B. Falion (Okemos, Mi USA)


Bath Massacre is the compelling account of the tragic events of May 18, 1927 in the tiny town of Bath, Michigan where Andrew Kehoe dynamites the local consolidated school killing 45; 38 of them children.

Bernstein takes the reader back to the bustling and growing town of Bath and lays the foundation of the town and its people leading up to that fateful day when a disgruntled farmer and school board member sets out on a path of destruction: mudering his wife, setting his farm on fire, blowing up the school, and eventually killing himself and others in a final devastating explosion. He delves into the mind of this madman trying to make sense of a senseless act.

Thorough, detailed, and gripping.Bath Massacre: America's First School Bombing

Thursday, September 17, 2009

A few

Wednesday, September 09, 2009

Where I Went for Summer Vacation




Soo Locks, Frontier Town, Deer Ranch, Our Lady of the Pines, Totem Village, The Underground Forest, and Hiawatha. If these names conjur up visions of summer vacations of your childhood you can relive them in all their glory...but you have to be quick! The Michigan Historical Museum is ending it's eight month exhibit MICHIGAN'S ROADSIDE ATTRACTIONS and it is WONDERFUL!
The museum is free, parking is inexpensive and the exhibit can be easily seen in an hour but you'll want to spend more time. Bring your camera, you can take photos.