Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lol weakest trolling attempt I’ve seen in awhile
Yes, especially the “fancy careers” part.
Anonymous wrote:Lol weakest trolling attempt I’ve seen in awhile
Anonymous wrote:People may think you are a divorcee or a difficult person if you haven't taken the last name. I said the silent part out loud, it does matter
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My name is who I am, OP. Why would I change myself? My husband never wanted me to change my name either. Our children have a hyphenated name, to reflect both our families: my husband and I each have a different national and cultural background, so it was important to us. Which means there are three last names in our nuclear family. It doesn't bother us, and it doesn't bother any medical, border control, or government administration of any country in which we hold passports or residency permits.
You seem to have lived under a rock all these years. Women have been keeping their own names and identities for generations. Any man who thinks their wife should change their name is strange and weird, unless he'd be fine changing his name to his wife's if that was her preference.
Out of curiosity, when your hyphenated children marry other hyphenated children, do they mega hyphenate the names?
Anonymous wrote:I mean, you either take a man’s name (your husband) or keep a man’s name (your father’s or grandfather’s).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What problems could it possibly cause “down the road”? I’m genuinely asking you.
I didn’t change my name, partly because I have an established professional license and publications in my maiden name, partly because I didn’t want to give up part of my identity while he kept his. Seems an unfair way to start things out. I suggested that both of us change our names (to his mom’s maiden name) and he didn’t want to do that. He also didn’t pressure me to change to his name. I might have changed it at least for personal use if his surname was an easy one, but it’s not (neither is my maiden name). Oh well.
PS - 15 years in, three kids with his surname, and no problems because of it.
No one cares about your profession maiden name, Hillary Clinton took the last name and she's as lib and professional as they get.
Anonymous wrote:People may think you are a divorcee or a difficult person if you haven't taken the last name. I said the silent part out loud, it does matter
Anonymous wrote:My name is who I am, OP. Why would I change myself? My husband never wanted me to change my name either. Our children have a hyphenated name, to reflect both our families: my husband and I each have a different national and cultural background, so it was important to us. Which means there are three last names in our nuclear family. It doesn't bother us, and it doesn't bother any medical, border control, or government administration of any country in which we hold passports or residency permits.
You seem to have lived under a rock all these years. Women have been keeping their own names and identities for generations. Any man who thinks their wife should change their name is strange and weird, unless he'd be fine changing his name to his wife's if that was her preference.
Anonymous wrote:Please also do not-the name. It is very irritating. You have to fit this giant name with the dash that often doesn't work for email and other logins and everything and most forms don't accept that long of a name. And what happens. If your children another – another – is just out of control, just please stop it. It's ridiculous. Just use the husband's last name and be over with it