Pronounced BOH-dee (/ˈboʊdi/), Bohdi is a contemporary respelling of the Sanskrit word “bodhi”—a term that, since antiquity, has signified awakening, illumination, and the serene wisdom (sapientia) attained by the Buddha beneath the legendary Bodhi tree. Like a soft dawn diffusing rose-gold light across a still lagoon, the name carries an aura of tranquil insight, inviting the bearer toward a life oriented to reflection and compassionate action. Its etymological roots reach eastward to the Indian subcontinent, yet its symbolic branches intertwine with universal ideals long cherished in the West; the Latin adage “lux mentis” (“light of the mind”) echoes the very heartbeat of bodhi, fusing two classical traditions into a single, luminous thread. Although Bohdi remains a rare gem in the United States—hovering in the mid-800s on recent Social Security lists—its gentle upward drift suggests that a growing number of parents are enchanted by names that promise both spiritual depth and lyrical simplicity. Thus, Bohdi stands as a quiet torchbearer, offering newborn sons a moniker that is at once academically venerable, culturally resonant, and warmly evocative of enlightenment’s enduring promise.