In the Name of the Father... Part Dunno

What is the male counterpart of Mad Momma?
Paagal Papa, I suppose... and that's what I have been for the last 16 days, 1 hour and 3 minutes!

He Who Must Be Named

Well, he has been named... Dyujoy Chaudhuri. And the reactions have been far from gratifying. Sample these:
"Is it a family conspiracy to have difficult names?"
"What?"
"How do you spell that?"
"Kiiii?"
"Ki shundor naam... kintu, maaney ki?"
Maaney holo "conqueror of heavens". And as of now, no precedents - mythological or literary - have been identified.

End of story? Not quite. Now, there is still this huge matter of finding a daak-naam for him. Dyujoy and all is very fine for his school-leaving certificates and bail application forms, but what will everybody call him?
And as several posts have propounded, the Bengali daak-naam is a mystery shrouded in an enigma behind theIron Curtain beyond the Solar System.

So, to avoid any prolonged debate and heart-burns thereof, I have decided to keep his daak naam in true Wikipedia style.
Open content. Anybody can come in and edit as long as it does not hurt the religious, political and social sensibilities of the parents.

Officially, the name is Joy. Though the grandparents have opted for a hip-and-happening DJ!

And I am freaking out... on various days, I have called him:
* Osama - the night of 11th Sept, when he bawled his lungs out to raze the twin towers of his mom & dad!
* Gangster - the day his behaviour did not allow us to watch the eponymous movie.
* Dalai - a dreamy, Oriental look usually associated with post-excretum ecstacy.
* Pantua - a creased, puckered-up look in which he sucks in air to let out a really horrendous howl and goes deep red like one.
* Dhumrolochan - literally, it should mean Smoky Eyes (I think). I must have read it in some book or the other but cannot remember where.

And as for affectionate names a parent can call a child, there cannot be a better example than the following untranslatable one...

Comments

Anonymous said…
The grand parents, with the strong approval of the aunt and a few near ones are propsing 'Tojo' as his daak naam.
The author's father also gave quite a few names to the author when he was 0 - 1 year old. One name is still in the memory - "Dosyu Ghochang Fu"

As far as misbehaviour goes, the author was far worse than his son during his first month. He literally howled through out each and and every night, keeping his mother and grandmother awake. Tina is giving the kid grades depending upon the kid's behaviour at night and during the day. And the kid isn't doing all that badly - grades are C, B+ and sometimes A too. If the author's mother gave him grades he would have maintained a consistent record of D- through out the first month.
Who is complaining now?
the mad momma said…
:o) i was shocked to see two posts on today's date... this obviously means the kid is not giving you a tough enough time!!!!!

and i just spent a very pleasant and peaceful afternoon with you so i dont know why the mother is being so harsh with her grading system.
Anonymous said…
In my rather extensive Bong-experience, here are the daak-names I have encountered:
Gogol. JiJo. Tito. Pico. Repeat.
Anonymous said…
It is a welcome joy ..... Hello there ...your humor is getting better .... Call me mond... Raymond
sidwho? said…
Dhumrolochan--- The genie, also called Dhumro, in one of Shibram's short stories.
For ডাকনাম, you seem to have overlooked so many lovely animal names. If you don't like it large (tyrannosaurus rex, rhinoceros, hippopotamus ), you may shorten them (Rex, Rhino or Hep) or choose elegant desi ones (পাঁঠা, বলদ, তিমি; the options are endless. An acquaintance of mine named his twins কাজু and বাদাম. It could've been Whisky and Soda had his wife not objected. Nice post here!