Is this tongue in cheek (on purpose)? You do realize the idea of bastards is one passed down by the patriarchy. Marriage is a lot of wonderful things but we no longer throw kids in orphanages and women in whore houses for having kids outside of marriage while ignoring men’s infidelity. |
I have never understood refusing to take your husband’s last name as you s have a man’s name as your surname. |
My surname is my name in the same way that my first name is my name. Once it was given to me when I was born, it became mine. It's the name I had for 30 years before I married dh. Why should I change it? |
This. Also, my husband's name and my name don't go together well. Finally my husband said he fell in love with me with my original name, and didn't see why I would have to change it. |
First two kids, dad’s last name. I never liked my last name , but I really did not like the ring of his either with my first name nor did I want to go through the hassle of a name change to one I didn’t like. Think Marcy Darcy.
For my second two eleven years later with a different partner, he was adopted and his name was changed by an abusive parent. Even he doesn’t like his last name. I changed my last name and our kids to a completely new name, which I now love. He is still holding out since his adopted siblings all have the same name from that evil family. |
NP here, me too! I posted on another recent thread how it took a really strong man to be confident enough in his manhood to make decisions about naming in marriage/children as an equal partner with a spouse - that is, considering equally the possibility of taking a spouse's name, or not, and having both spouses have equal consideration in whose surname is given to children. Someone scoffed that a person's choice of naming conventions has nothing to do with strength, but's ignoramuses like the "cuck" commenter that show that it take's a strong man to stand up to the sensitive snowflake men who consider their names to be extensions of their manhood. |
Um. My own name is my surname. It's not my father's name any more than it is my aunt's name. It's our family name. I was born with it, she was born with it, he was born with it. It's mine. (And I'm a woman and now it is my son's.) |
Who cares? Why are you picking a fight over this? |
I didn't change my name as I had already had publications under my name when I married. My kids have my last name as their middle name and my husband's last name as their true last name. Spanish speaking folk do this best--their kids are First Name Mother's Last Name Father's Last Name. Much more equitable. |
Right, it was your father's name and descended down the patriarchy. So, you were given a man's name when you were born. There's no shame in that, just understand that you're not really doing anything different by taking your husband's name. |
It’s your father’s name. If he had a different last name then you’d have a different last name. |
This this this this this |
I'm not particularly a feminist, so that's not why I kept my name when I got married. I am who I am, and it seemed weird to me to change my name part way through my life because of a tradition that I didn't find persuasive. When my kids were born, I was totally fine giving them my husband'a last name. I have not for one minute felt my connection to them or to my husband diminished because I don't share their last name. And it has not once been an issue logistically or caused any confusion as to our being a family. It's just not a big deal. Heck, it's not even a small deal. |
Because the only alternative was saddling the kids with a hyphenated last name, which would have been long. And it was important to DH and less important to me. |
Getting a name for the first time is a completely different issue than changing a name. |