a girl named jack
Good enough name for me, my father said
 the day I was born.
 Don't see why
 she can't have it, too.
 But the women said no.
 My mother first.
 Then each aunt, pulling my pink blanket back
 patting the crop of thick curls
 tugging at my new toes
 touching my cheeks.
 We won't have a girl named Jack, my mother said.
 And my father's sisters whispered,
 A boy named Jack was bad enough.
 But only so my mother could hear.
 Name a girl Jack, my father said,
 and she can't help but
 grow up strong.
 Raise her right, my father said,
 and she'll make that name her own.
 Name a girl Jack
 and people will look at her twice, my father said.
 For no good reason but to ask if her parents
 were crazy, my mother said.
 And back and forth it went until I was Jackie
 and my father left the hospital mad.
 My mother said to my aunts,
 Hand me that pen, wrote
 Jacqueline where it asked for a name.
 Jacqueline, just in case
 someone thought to drop the ie.
 Jacqueline,  just in case
 I grew up and wanted something a little bit longer
 and further away from
 Jack.
Copyright Credit: Jacqueline Woodson, "a girl named jack" from Brown Girl Dreaming. Copyright © 2014 by Jacqueline Woodson. Used by permission of Nancy Paulsen Books, an imprint of Penguin Young Readers Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC.
Source: Brown Girl Dreaming (Nancy Paulsen Books, 2014)


