Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Formally and traditionally, she is and always will be Mrs. John Smith - unless of course she marries again.
It is not 1950, and it never will be again. We’re done with that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Formally and traditionally, she is and always will be Mrs. John Smith - unless of course she marries again.
No, just no. Use her actual first name and whatever last name she used. Women are not their husbands’ property!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Formally and traditionally, she is and always will be Mrs. John Smith - unless of course she marries again.
It is not 1950, and it never will be again. We’re done with that.
You may be done with it, but it's still correct.
No, it was “correct” in 1950. You do realize it is closer to 2050 than to 1950, yes? We’re not doing the sexist BS anymore. You can hang on to your pearls, but the world has moved on. If you want to be a dinosaur, that’s fine. But if you send me something addressed to “Mrs. Donald Draper” it is going in the recycling, unopened.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Formally and traditionally, she is and always will be Mrs. John Smith - unless of course she marries again.
It is not 1950, and it never will be again. We’re done with that.
You may be done with it, but it's still correct.
No, it was “correct” in 1950. You do realize it is closer to 2050 than to 1950, yes? We’re not doing the sexist BS anymore. You can hang on to your pearls, but the world has moved on. If you want to be a dinosaur, that’s fine. But if you send me something addressed to “Mrs. Donald Draper” it is going in the recycling, unopened.
Anonymous wrote:She’s your aunt. It’s a sympathy card, not a wedding invitation. I’d put Aunt Larla.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Formally and traditionally, she is and always will be Mrs. John Smith - unless of course she marries again.
It is not 1950, and it never will be again. We’re done with that.
You may be done with it, but it's still correct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's the important part: his death didn't change what you'd write.
If she was Mrs. John Smith before, she is still that now.
If she was Ms. Anna Smith before, she is still that now.
If she was Anna Smith before, she is still that now.
No change. That's the deal.
THANK YOU!
My neighbor, who has always been Mrs. John Smith, would want you to send the sympathy card to Mrs John Smith. In fact, it bothers her when people change it to her first name. We don't have to share her customs, but it's not our place to override her values with ours.
Anonymous wrote:
Of course she isn't going to forget. But waiving it in front of her face while she is in mourning is a little insensitive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Formally and traditionally, she is and always will be Mrs. John Smith - unless of course she marries again.
It is not 1950, and it never will be again. We’re done with that.
You may be done with it, but it's still correct.
Anonymous wrote:Here's the important part: his death didn't change what you'd write.
If she was Mrs. John Smith before, she is still that now.
If she was Ms. Anna Smith before, she is still that now.
If she was Anna Smith before, she is still that now.
No change. That's the deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Formally and traditionally, she is and always will be Mrs. John Smith - unless of course she marries again.
No, just no. Use her actual first name and whatever last name she used. Women are not their husbands’ property!
I'm not my husband's property, but I'm very happy to be Mrs. HIS FIRST NAME OUR LAST NAME
ew
I would address it to Aunt Bernice Smith, personally. This is a moment to be familiar, not to be weirdly formal.
I love that you'd write "Aunt" on the envelope going in the mail. Reminds me of when I tried to send my grandma a card and my parents didn't catch that I addressed it to "Grandma" AND left the apartment number off the address. It came back to us with a note from a mailman clearly having a trying time, that said, "There are a LOT of grandmas in this building - which one!?"
Of course I'd write aunt on the card. That's who she is to me. I would also give her name - HER name, not her husband's name - and address, so it can reach her.
I address cards to my parents as Mom and Dad Smith, too. I am not suggesting everyone do exactly as I do, but I can't fathom in a hundred million years addressing a relative as Mrs. Husband's Name. I can't imagine addressing anyone that way - I am 49, this seems just wildly old fashioned to me - but especially not someone who is my blood.
On the card, or the envelope?
I always use last names on envelopes. If' I'm sending a birthday card to my 2 year old nephew I write "Larlo Higgenbotham" and "Hildegarde Merriweather" for the return address even though inside I'll write "Pumpkin" and "Love, Auntie Hilda".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Formally and traditionally, she is and always will be Mrs. John Smith - unless of course she marries again.
It is not 1950, and it never will be again. We’re done with that.
Anonymous wrote:Formally and traditionally, she is and always will be Mrs. John Smith - unless of course she marries again.