Brand me - There's always a deeper meaning behind something as conventional as naming a baby.
Lord
A name can either break or make you, Meredith learned the hard way the moment she stepped out into independency.
The barrier of social recognition as a surgeon was divided in two extremes for her; effort and Hard work (left) or legacy and easy rides (right).
The sample had a tendency to the right extreme, the Grey extreme.
Her mother was a hero, she defied the patriarchy and the meaning of medicine, she was the ruler of the land; of whipples and colectomies. Meredith was just an heir whose only task was to not screw it up.
There's no room for being extraordinary because her mother was it.
Royally inbred, huh? Well, there's always room for improvement and maybe she won't be the ruler everyone asked for but she will be the one keeping their land afloat.
Defender of the people
Alex liked pediatrics, sort of; it was his little (big) secret.
His father was a junkie and her mother was schizophrenic. He's got the genes of failures.
Temperament and character. Babies are born with their parent's temperament and quickly adapt to life and become character too.
He was born with the genes of failure, he knew that, so he tried not succumb to them. He chose to become character and not temperament, even if the world seemed to be against him.
And he chose to defend the people who were born with the genes of disease.
You're not born, you're made.
A secret thrill runs through his body whenever Bailey mentions that he's doing rounds on pediatrics. He mutters, "whatever," and tries to hide his smirk.
Farmer
George watered seeds with a smile plastered on his face. That was his job, keeping everybody sane while getting the short end of the deal.
He didn't hate being everybody's shrink, kind of. Izzie listened to him, Cristina joked with him, and Meredith was nice to him.
They acknowledged him. He wasn't used to it, including his family.
("Now, son, pull the trigger when you think you've got it.")
He liked putting people together, he wanted to water the seeds and watch people grow.
He didn't want to pull the trigger, he wanted to stitch together the bullet hole.
He wanted to put people back together, not only emotionally, but physically too.
He wanted to be a trauma surgeon.
God is my oath
Izzie took an oath; the oath of life, the oath of shortening death sentences with Positive laws and the indisputable function of air, blood and neurons.
Was their function actually vital? You can think of lungs, veins and synaptic connections, or you can think of natural elements, internal forces and mind keeping you alive.
Environment, physiology and psyche; they all depended on each other.
She could diagnose with physiological knowledge; she could think of a solution with her psyche and she could learn from her environment.
She doesn't believe in complete absolutes and she believes in the existence of miracles, which is why whenever she meets a patient she says,
"Hi, I'm Dr. Isobel Stevens but you can call me Izzie."
She does believe in science but she also took a personal oath to care.
Christ bearer
Her mother remarried into a Jewish family, she hadn't had faith in a particular religion but she converted.
Cristina is sure that her mother picked out her name based on a random it girl that showed up in a vogue magazine, her family was all about the appearances, not about the meaning.
Her father (may he rest in peace) refused to let Cristina convert and she was glad he did so, she barely had knowledge about basic math's at the time and her mother was making her commit. This was her first of many other forms of rebellion.
It followed with skipping ballet classes to watch NatGeo, with trips to the museum instead of her monthly shopping spree at Rodeo Drive and with focusing on school instead of adopting the proper etiquette to charm future leaders.
Ha! She was going to be a future leader.
She made her choice and committed to greatness and her faith relied on (t)he(I)r beating heart.
A/N: I thought a good way to start was with the squad. Set between season 1-2. If you didn't get the drill, we're talking about name meanings here.