Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop it with the middle name business. It doesn’t count as some kind of feminist statement. No one ever knows or cares what your middle name is u less you are a high school year book editor.
I did not do this personally (my last name as a middle name for my children), but I'm guessing they didn't do it as a feminist statement or because they care about anyone else's approval. Get down off your high horse.
What I do not get are people like OP or PP who feel the need to chime in about this choice. How does it affect you in any way? Why do you care so much that you come on here and snipe? Suggests some issue with you that you need to resolve.
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It’s an anonymous website. I would never call out my friends on their stupid choices, but I can vent here it’s great. The middle name
Stuff is bull shit. If you are confident in your choice, you won’t care about my opinion. And yes, I’m fact, I am right about this. It’s bull shit feminism to give your kid your father’s last name as their middle name and somehow claim that is a equal to reclaiming a “sir” name. Maybe I’m radical, but I’m so fing tired of all these liberal arts school feminist getting precious about their Daddy’s last name. Why do you care what I care about. I’m also very passionate about my diet soda preferences (diet Barq’s or bust) and no one calls me out for being on a high horse about that stuff. I’m allowed to have an opinion on this. Opinions are totally free and allowed. I also prefer the color blue.
Anonymous wrote:Stop it with the middle name business. It doesn’t count as some kind of feminist statement. No one ever knows or cares what your middle name is u less you are a high school year book editor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I kept my cumbersome last name (hyphenated since birth) because it is my last name— and also very unique. I guess the weirdos here would say it’s a combination of my paternal grandfather’s name and my father’s but whatever.
I gave my kid her father’s last name because she is biracial and I am white and it’s really important to me that she is aligned with her father’s culture. His last name is distinctively indigenous to his country of origin. I gave a lot of thought to this and perhaps would have hyphenated if that wouldn’t have meant three last names! But as it would have, I went with his last name and my double-last name as her middle name.
So everyone still got their name from a male. Except you don’t have the benefit of sharing your name with your husband.
Anonymous wrote:I kept my cumbersome last name (hyphenated since birth) because it is my last name— and also very unique. I guess the weirdos here would say it’s a combination of my paternal grandfather’s name and my father’s but whatever.
I gave my kid her father’s last name because she is biracial and I am white and it’s really important to me that she is aligned with her father’s culture. His last name is distinctively indigenous to his country of origin. I gave a lot of thought to this and perhaps would have hyphenated if that wouldn’t have meant three last names! But as it would have, I went with his last name and my double-last name as her middle name.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hyphens are so eighties
I think you meant 90s?
Nobody hyphenated in the 80s. Nobody.
Signed,
I hyphenated my name in the late 90s
And my mom did it in 1976...
A lot of my patents’ friends who married in the 80s hyphenated their names upon marriage. It was very common in the community I grew up in to the point that I wished my parents had done it too so I could have a hyphenated name like the other kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hyphens are so eighties
I think you meant 90s?
Nobody hyphenated in the 80s. Nobody.
Signed,
I hyphenated my name in the late 90s
And my mom did it in 1976...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hyphens are so eighties
I think you meant 90s?
Nobody hyphenated in the 80s. Nobody.
Signed,
I hyphenated my name in the late 90s
Anonymous wrote:Hyphens are so eighties