Anonymous wrote:Not changing your name means you're not a team player and would be a red flag for me, sorry.
Anonymous wrote:Not changing your name means you're not a team player and would be a red flag for me, sorry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Haven’t read the replies but this might blow your mind: when you give birth in hospital with a different last name, the children are given your last name, whether you’re married or not. You have to specifically change it if you want them to have your husband’s last name. So you can still have the same name as your children. And if your husband wants to share the name as his children then he can change his name to do that.
It would blow my mind if it were true but I gave birth in a hospital with a different last name from my spouse and this didn’t happen.
So: it doesn’t blow my mind, except in how freaked out some people are about this that they will literally make up stories about it to support their POV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As the title says: I'm getting married in a few days in it hasn't crossed my mind to keep my surname. We're going to start a family and I'd love all of us to have the same surname, as we're playing for the same team. My soon to be husband is ecstatic as well that I'm taking his surname. I was aware that women with fancy careers or with research published under their names kept their surnames at higher rates as they had build a name under their maiden surname. However, I started noticing a similar trend among women with less public careers and even homemakers who I know for a fact are married. I can't imagine having a different surname than my children, but it looks like some women see nothing wrong with this. Is there a reason for this? Doesn't it cause problems the road? Just asking out of curiosity.
And it hasn't crossed my mind to change mine. Changing my name feels like we're playing for the same team but he's the recruiter, and that I'm not an equal.
What about changing my name to his makes me unequal? It's just a small gesture. It's no different than a man giving a ring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As the title says: I'm getting married in a few days in it hasn't crossed my mind to keep my surname. We're going to start a family and I'd love all of us to have the same surname, as we're playing for the same team. My soon to be husband is ecstatic as well that I'm taking his surname. I was aware that women with fancy careers or with research published under their names kept their surnames at higher rates as they had build a name under their maiden surname. However, I started noticing a similar trend among women with less public careers and even homemakers who I know for a fact are married. I can't imagine having a different surname than my children, but it looks like some women see nothing wrong with this. Is there a reason for this? Doesn't it cause problems the road? Just asking out of curiosity.
And it hasn't crossed my mind to change mine. Changing my name feels like we're playing for the same team but he's the recruiter, and that I'm not an equal.
Anonymous wrote:As the title says: I'm getting married in a few days in it hasn't crossed my mind to keep my surname. We're going to start a family and I'd love all of us to have the same surname, as we're playing for the same team. My soon to be husband is ecstatic as well that I'm taking his surname. I was aware that women with fancy careers or with research published under their names kept their surnames at higher rates as they had build a name under their maiden surname. However, I started noticing a similar trend among women with less public careers and even homemakers who I know for a fact are married. I can't imagine having a different surname than my children, but it looks like some women see nothing wrong with this. Is there a reason for this? Doesn't it cause problems the road? Just asking out of curiosity.
Anonymous wrote:No way i am changing my surname to my wife’s name
Anonymous wrote:Haven’t read the replies but this might blow your mind: when you give birth in hospital with a different last name, the children are given your last name, whether you’re married or not. You have to specifically change it if you want them to have your husband’s last name. So you can still have the same name as your children. And if your husband wants to share the name as his children then he can change his name to do that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Studies show that it's better to all have the same last name but it's a personal decision.
What studies? Citations or you’re talking out of your nether end.
Here are the titles and sources of five academic studies and articles related to family members sharing last names:
1. "Sharing Surnames: Children, Family and Kinship" by Hayley Davies, 2011 (SAGE Journals)
2. "Sharing Surnames: Children, Family and Kinship" (ResearchGate)
3. "Last name analysis of mobility, gender imbalance, and nepotism across academic systems" (PNAS)
4. "The Power of Naming: Surnames, Children, and Spouses" (Oxford Academic)
5. "A Study of Family Communication & the College Experience" (STARS, University of Central Florida)
These studies explore the implications of shared family last names in various contexts including family dynamics, academic settings, and societal norms.
dAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Studies show that it's better to all have the same last name but it's a personal decision.
What studies? Citations or you’re talking out of your nether end.
Here are the titles and sources of five academic studies and articles related to family members sharing last names:
1. "Sharing Surnames: Children, Family and Kinship" by Hayley Davies, 2011 (SAGE Journals)
2. "Sharing Surnames: Children, Family and Kinship" (ResearchGate)
3. "Last name analysis of mobility, gender imbalance, and nepotism across academic systems" (PNAS)
4. "The Power of Naming: Surnames, Children, and Spouses" (Oxford Academic)
5. "A Study of Family Communication & the College Experience" (STARS, University of Central Florida)
These studies explore the implications of shared family last names in various contexts including family dynamics, academic settings, and societal norms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Haven’t read the replies but this might blow your mind: when you give birth in hospital with a different last name, the children are given your last name, whether you’re married or not. You have to specifically change it if you want them to have your husband’s last name. So you can still have the same name as your children. And if your husband wants to share the name as his children then he can change his name to do that.
Not really. The baby's wrist tag and plastic crib will have the mother's surname on it. For us that was my family name. They want to match the newborn with the mother lying in the hospital bed, not with the father who isn't going to feed this baby.
The official who came around to get us to fill out the forms for the state of Virginia birth certificate wrote down the name we wanted, which was first name/middle name/father's last name. It was no problem whatsoever.
Anonymous wrote:Haven’t read the replies but this might blow your mind: when you give birth in hospital with a different last name, the children are given your last name, whether you’re married or not. You have to specifically change it if you want them to have your husband’s last name. So you can still have the same name as your children. And if your husband wants to share the name as his children then he can change his name to do that.