Anonymous wrote:What is your general field of work? I'm curious, because our dd is now 10, and out of all he moms I've met over the years, easily hundreds, I can only think of three that kept their maiden names.
Once you have kids, it is really so much easier for everyone to have the same last name.
Anonymous wrote:It's a very normal English last name.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd never say anything but secretly I think less of women who change their names.
And you are part of the problem. Why does it matter to you?
Because their actions affect all of us. When some women continue to bow to sexist traditions, other women are expected to follow suit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd never say anything but secretly I think less of women who change their names.
And you are part of the problem. Why does it matter to you?
Because their actions affect all of us. When some women continue to bow to sexist traditions, other women are expected to follow suit.
While a majority of respondents think women should have a choice in the matter, most ended up taking their husband's last name when it came to their personal decision. Sixty percent of the women polled legally changed their surname to their husband's name, 11 percent of women kept their maiden name and only 8 percent opted to hyphenate or otherwise combine their maiden name with their husband's name. (The remaining 23 percent of women have never married.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd never say anything but secretly I think less of women who change their names.
And you are part of the problem. Why does it matter to you?
Because their actions affect all of us. When some women continue to bow to sexist traditions, other women are expected to follow suit.
Anonymous wrote:Husband and wife having a similar last name is not a matter of like or dislike. Of course no one would like to change a name that has been there with you for a good part of their life whether it is the husband or the wife. But fortunately or unfortunately it has been a tradition of the world for hundreds of years and our society has adopted to accommodate that. So one should blame our ancestors if you think it's the husband who should change the name or you think wife should not change the name at all.
Here's my point. Since it has been a tradition for many years, there are consequences for going against it. Here's a small example: What last name would the children have? And there will be many of these down the road of life.
On a more important note. Family is a unit, one team, a coexistence that needs to survive in the long run. Hence it naturally make sense to have everybody on the same page and being able to compromise has everything to do for its survival. Therefore, not willing to change ones name can say a lot about the self-centeredness of that person and usually a good recipe for a disaster in family life.
Anonymous wrote:Husband and wife having a similar last name is not a matter of like or dislike. Of course no one would like to change a name that has been there with you for a good part of their life whether it is the husband or the wife. But fortunately or unfortunately it has been a tradition of the world for hundreds of years and our society has adopted to accommodate that. So one should blame our ancestors if you think it's the husband who should change the name or you think wife should not change the name at all.
Here's my point. Since it has been a tradition for many years, there are consequences for going against it. Here's a small example: What last name would the children have? And there will be many of these down the road of life.
On a more important note. Family is a unit, one team, a coexistence that needs to survive in the long run. Hence it naturally make sense to have everybody on the same page and being able to compromise has everything to do for its survival. Therefore, not willing to change ones name can say a lot about the self-centeredness of that person and usually a good recipe for a disaster in family life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'd never say anything but secretly I think less of women who change their names.
And you are part of the problem. Why does it matter to you?
It matters to me bc only women are expected to change their names. If it were truly a choice men would change their name too. It's a horrible outdated expectation that I am against.
You are overstating this as a problem.
And, FYI, men do change their names. Google is your friend. And I offered. DW though that was cool, but didn't want me to.
Take your ill-informed self-righteous indignation elsewhere.
Very few men change their name and it isn't expected of them