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How I Came Up With the Name Foreignish

By Yaldaz Sadakova

Photo by Yaldaz Sadakova

This time last year is when I finally decided on the name Foreignish for this website.

It took me more than a year to come up with that name.

I wanted to avoid using the words immigrant or expat. They’re so clichéd, and they evoke so many stereotypes.

I wanted a more creative name to convey that the platform I had in mind was about creative writing rather than news. About nuanced immigration stories rather than stereotypical pieces.

I started brainstorming. The list of names I came up with was awful.

  • Belong
  • Belong Fully
  • The Rootless Republic
  • Hyphenated
  • Not Sure Where Home Is 
  • Home, Elusive Home
  • Glocal (that sounds like glaucoma; what I meant was “both global and local”)

None of these names felt right. I hated them all.

Then I went to a Vipassana meditation retreat.

At the start of the retreat, before the 10-day meditation course began, I met a young woman, Preethi.

“There’s this website I want to create, a website for creative writing about immigration, but I can’t come up with a name. It’s driving me crazy,” I told her.

“Don’t worry,” she said. “The name will come to you when the time is right.”

More than half a year passed.

I still didn’t have a name, even though I’d started writing some of the stories that I would eventually publish.

I was still referring to my project as “my website.”

I started to worry.

Then, out of nowhere, the word foreignish came to me.

I don’t remember how the word was planted in my head.

I don’t remember if I was doing the dishes or jogging when it came to me.

It felt more like it had always been there, and it had just been a matter of quieting my mind so I could hear it.

The moment I became aware of that word, I loved it.

I knew it was the right word because it captured the existential state I was in, the state I wanted to write about on this new platform.

That ambiguous, angst-inducing state of being neither completely foreign nor completely local.

Then I checked if that domain name was available.

Miraculously, it was!

If you’ve had to buy a domain name, you know how hard it is to come up with something that hasn’t been taken. It’s harder than naming a baby.

So I grabbed my credit card, entered the number, and just like that became the proud owner of Foreignish.net. ♦


ALSO READ:

The Shame of Forgetting My Mother Tongue

 

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