No one cares, even if your husband is president |
That's the takeaway of changing your last name only if you want it to be. |
Silly http://www.npr.org/2012/07/19/156923573/when-hyphen-boy-meets-hyphen-girl-names-pile-up |
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I offered to change my name if DH changed his. We could create a new last name or both use hyphenated last name. He chose to keep his name and I chose to keep mine. When we had kids, I gave him another choice. The kids could have my last name or we could hyphenate. He chose to hyphenate. That was 15 years ago. We've never had complications, confusion or hassles because of it.
When the kids are adults, I'll respect their choice of name to use. My cousins had hyphenated names growing up. One kid still uses they hypenated name, one chose his mother's name, another chose her father's. |
Insane |
Both our last names are extremely common in our ethnic groups. In DH's case, half his countrymen have that last name! I didn't want my children to be lost in the name crowd, so we hyphenated, and I am sure that nobody else has that combination! |
How awful |
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Women make this much harder then it has to be. Kept my own name. When we had children, used my last name as their middle name. Problem solved! Everyone knows we're married. Changing your name does not reflect in a better marriage or more solid family unit. Living an authentic married life does that. |
This is why men shouldn't marry-up.
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I think this is a good compromise. |
Why is this so awful? Do you have an assurance as to what your kids will do if and when they get married? They may-- *gasp* -- decide to hyphenate their name with their spouse's. I always think these doomsday scenarios for hyphenated kids names are strange. as if any of us knows what our kids will do if and when they get married and have kids. |
I'm the lesbian who changed her name. What am I teaching my daughter? |
+1 And I threw up in my mouth a little bit at "family line." Is this medieval Europe? |
How is it a compromise? Middle names have little bearing on public life. |
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Here's a strange trend I've seen:
I know several couples where the man takes his wife's maiden name as his middle name, and the wife changes her last name to the husband's. So both husband and wife have the same middle and last names. Both husbands I know make a big deal out of it, like it shows how progressive they are. Personally, it seems totally stupid to me. First, they went through all the paperwork just to change their middle name. Second, who uses their middle name on anything? It's just a lot of symbolism but the wife still changed her last name, which is what counts. Personally, if I were going to use my husband's last name I would do what one of my relatives did: she uses her husband's name socially (i.e. christmas cards, school, etc) but legally and professionally, she kept her name. So no paperwork, everything is still in her birth name. But she goes by her husband's name outside of the office. |