[Opinions] Re: Stanley
in reply to a message by namesarecool285
It's not hideous but it's not that great either. Nowadays kids are very familiar with Flat Stanley so any Stanley is liable to be called that at least sometimes. And the nn Stan is liable to get called Stan the Man even by people who don't know about the baseball player Stan Musial.
I have a good friend whose family is of Polish descent, came over in the early 1900s. Apparently the name Stanley was so common among Polish-American males (probably at least partly due to it being an Americanization of Stanislav) that in places with a large Polish population, a Stanley was a generic term for a Polish man. They also used the nn Stash, pronounced Stosh, and that also became a generic and not especially polite term for a Polish man. When my friend was making his family tree, there were so many Stanleys and Stanislavs (many with the same last names; you'd be surprised how many Stanley Kowalskis there were; Tennessee Williams obviously didn't think very hard when naming his character) that he several times got totally unrelated people mixed up in his charts.
Before you criticize a man, walk a mile in his shoes. That way, when you criticize him, you're a mile away and you have his shoes!
Steve Martin
I have a good friend whose family is of Polish descent, came over in the early 1900s. Apparently the name Stanley was so common among Polish-American males (probably at least partly due to it being an Americanization of Stanislav) that in places with a large Polish population, a Stanley was a generic term for a Polish man. They also used the nn Stash, pronounced Stosh, and that also became a generic and not especially polite term for a Polish man. When my friend was making his family tree, there were so many Stanleys and Stanislavs (many with the same last names; you'd be surprised how many Stanley Kowalskis there were; Tennessee Williams obviously didn't think very hard when naming his character) that he several times got totally unrelated people mixed up in his charts.
Before you criticize a man, walk a mile in his shoes. That way, when you criticize him, you're a mile away and you have his shoes!
Steve Martin