Anonymous wrote:Our children have my name as their middle, my husbands as their last. So they have both names.
Anonymous wrote:It is weird. I didn't change my name and my kid has husband's last name. Out of 20 kids in her preschool class for two years straight, 50% of moms had a different last name from dad, but (no joke) 100% of kids had dad's last name or hyphenated. We think through the decision about whether to change our names when we get married, but still default to the societal norm for our kids.
We did the same. My kid has my last name as the middle, but 99% of the time she is First HusbandLast. We decided to do it the other way around First HusbandLast MyLast for a second kid, and it was actually husband's idea to do it that way, but alas secondary infertility got in the way and we're one and done.
Anonymous wrote:I kept my maiden name because I was well established career-wise and my last name was part of my identity. Those reasons didn’t apply to my children.
Anonymous wrote:I kept my name because I am a feminist and it is ridiculous to expect me to change my name.
Kids are hyphenated last names. DH didn’t want to, I insisted - they are my kids as well as his.
I think the whole thing about hyphenated last names being “too long” is defensive - if you have a long last name like Richardson, you don’t think of it as burdensome. I’m not saying you should hyphenate, just that “too long” is not a reasonable excuse - just own that you don’t want to hyphenate.
Anonymous wrote:I kept my name because I am a feminist and it is ridiculous to expect me to change my name.
Kids are hyphenated last names. DH didn’t want to, I insisted - they are my kids as well as his.
I think the whole thing about hyphenated last names being “too long” is defensive - if you have a long last name like Richardson, you don’t think of it as burdensome. I’m not saying you should hyphenate, just that “too long” is not a reasonable excuse - just own that you don’t want to hyphenate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our children have my name as their middle, my husbands as their last. So they have both names.
This is what I did. My husband and I come from very different ethnic backgrounds and if either one of us took the other person's name it would shock most people when the name was an obvious dissonance to the face. The kid is a mutt, though looks more like me, so he has First Name My Last name as middle, Dads last name.
And forgot to add - we went with an Ethnic first name from my ethnic background, so i got 2 out of 3 for this deal!
Anonymous wrote:Who cares? Why are you picking a fight over this?
Just found this, I am not going to read the previous pages.Anonymous wrote:Help me understand why most women who choose not to change their names when they get married still choose to give their children their husband's last name? It just seems like if you choose to give up an old tradition of taking your husband's last name, why would you choose your husband's last name for your children? I'm not criticizing. Really. I'm just trying to understand...