Anonymous wrote:I think I am a unicorn. I kept my maiden name but I also prefer , in a social,situation, such as Christmas cards, to be known socially as Mr. and Mrs.HisName LastName, and the HisLastName Family.
I will not get riled up at ALL with ANYthing written on our correspondence, however, people are nice enough to send us something? Thank you, and I appreciate it.
Anonymous wrote:OP again. I forgot I have an even trickier one.
Mom and kids are hyphenated Smith-Jones. Dad just has his original last name Jones but didn't add the hyphen.
Is Smith/Jones still acceptable here? Or do I do the Smith-Jones Family with a hypen instead, but that sort of ignores dad?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is an interesting thread to me. My wife kept her last name and our kids have my last name. We address cards to "The [Majority Last Name] Family" with no slashes or hyphens (unless that's the actual last name). We sign our cards that way, and our return address labels read that way. My wife set this pattern years ago, and so I follow it when helping to address the cards.
We get cards addressed to the "The [Wife] Family", "The [Husband] Family", and all variations depending on whether the sender knows one or other other of us better. None of them bother any of us, and I'd never thought twice about it.
And, so, now I've thought twice about it and don't intend to think about it again.
You could be my friend. If so, I find it super obnoxious that you know my last name is Smith and you insist on always announcing us as the Jones family whenever we enter a room.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm reasoned enough to know the intents are never passive-aggressive or deliberately ignorant so I really don't care how the cards are addressed.
I have a sister who remarried while having custody of her children from the first marriage. The mother, stepfather and kids have different last names, all in one house.
I just send the cards and invitations to their house addressed to my sister and her second husband and inside the cards just write "Merry Christmas, everyone!"
We have 3 last names in our house. My neighbor addresses our Christmas cards to Leo (that’s the cat) and Family. Works perfectly!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again. I forgot I have an even trickier one.
Mom and kids are hyphenated Smith-Jones. Dad just has his original last name Jones but didn't add the hyphen.
Is Smith/Jones still acceptable here? Or do I do the Smith-Jones Family with a hypen instead, but that sort of ignores dad?
In that case I do "Smith Jones Family" and allow them to either think the lack of hyphen was on purpose or by accident! Either way bases covered and no one really insulted.
I also privately think dad is a jerk for not just hyphenating his name like everyone else is. They all have to take his name but he can't add his wife's name? Come on, dude.
Lol, seriously.
To answer your question OP, we have the same set up as the family your'e asking about. I'm Larla Kim and DH and the kids are Larlo, Larlito and Larlita Park. I would do "Park/Kim family", but also, I personally am not offended by things addressed to "The Park Family" and in conversation I often refer to our family as "the Parks". The only thing that really annoys me is people who should know better (ie not strangers or people who only know me through my kids) straight up getting my last name wrong and directly calling me Larla Park. IMO as long as you don't do that you're good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Smith Jones family or just get over yourself bc you are the Jones family. No one else in your family has Smith, and unfortunately our society has no good way of doing names that does not reinforce the patriarchy. You, yourself, even gave in and named your kids after their dad only. So, while it's great to keep your maiden name, asserting it on the Xmas card is unnecessary. No one will forget you are a strong, independent woman.
You know, I kind of felt the same way as you and didn’t give it a second thought. Then my gay BIL got married and suddenly nobody in the family had any problems writing out both partners last names on cards and invitations.
It’s misogyny, pure and simple.
If you’re so irritated with your friend’s name, then I suggest you solve this problem by simply not sending her a card. Respecting someone’s name is as basic as it gets. If you can’t do that, then you’re not actually friends.
When it's just a couple with no kids and different last names, it's easy to wrote both names. It's when there are kids and you trying to figure out what you put for The LASTNAME Family on the card that it gets tricky.
As for me, I kept my maiden name. I send all cards to families with two names as Smith/Jones Family. I would probably do Smith-Jones Family for the case of the dad that didn't hypenate. And I don't care how people address cards to us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again. I forgot I have an even trickier one.
Mom and kids are hyphenated Smith-Jones. Dad just has his original last name Jones but didn't add the hyphen.
Is Smith/Jones still acceptable here? Or do I do the Smith-Jones Family with a hypen instead, but that sort of ignores dad?
In that case I do "Smith Jones Family" and allow them to either think the lack of hyphen was on purpose or by accident! Either way bases covered and no one really insulted.
I also privately think dad is a jerk for not just hyphenating his name like everyone else is. They all have to take his name but he can't add his wife's name? Come on, dude.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Smith Jones family or just get over yourself bc you are the Jones family. No one else in your family has Smith, and unfortunately our society has no good way of doing names that does not reinforce the patriarchy. You, yourself, even gave in and named your kids after their dad only. So, while it's great to keep your maiden name, asserting it on the Xmas card is unnecessary. No one will forget you are a strong, independent woman.
You know, I kind of felt the same way as you and didn’t give it a second thought. Then my gay BIL got married and suddenly nobody in the family had any problems writing out both partners last names on cards and invitations.
It’s misogyny, pure and simple.
If you’re so irritated with your friend’s name, then I suggest you solve this problem by simply not sending her a card. Respecting someone’s name is as basic as it gets. If you can’t do that, then you’re not actually friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is an interesting thread to me. My wife kept her last name and our kids have my last name. We address cards to "The [Majority Last Name] Family" with no slashes or hyphens (unless that's the actual last name). We sign our cards that way, and our return address labels read that way. My wife set this pattern years ago, and so I follow it when helping to address the cards.
We get cards addressed to the "The [Wife] Family", "The [Husband] Family", and all variations depending on whether the sender knows one or other other of us better. None of them bother any of us, and I'd never thought twice about it.
And, so, now I've thought twice about it and don't intend to think about it again.
You could be my friend. If so, I find it super obnoxious that you know my last name is Smith and you insist on always announcing us as the Jones family whenever we enter a room.
Because I suspect most people are not hypsersensitive or defensive about it. It may be a DCUM thing. What are you going to do? Agonize about it all day and build up a grudge?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is an interesting thread to me. My wife kept her last name and our kids have my last name. We address cards to "The [Majority Last Name] Family" with no slashes or hyphens (unless that's the actual last name). We sign our cards that way, and our return address labels read that way. My wife set this pattern years ago, and so I follow it when helping to address the cards.
We get cards addressed to the "The [Wife] Family", "The [Husband] Family", and all variations depending on whether the sender knows one or other other of us better. None of them bother any of us, and I'd never thought twice about it.
And, so, now I've thought twice about it and don't intend to think about it again.
You could be my friend. If so, I find it super obnoxious that you know my last name is Smith and you insist on always announcing us as the Jones family whenever we enter a room.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm reasoned enough to know the intents are never passive-aggressive or deliberately ignorant so I really don't care how the cards are addressed.
I have a sister who remarried while having custody of her children from the first marriage. The mother, stepfather and kids have different last names, all in one house.
I just send the cards and invitations to their house addressed to my sister and her second husband and inside the cards just write "Merry Christmas, everyone!"
This is a pretty naive view. When a MIL consistently uses your incorrect name, despite your husband having told her 10 years in a row, i think that's pretty clearly passive aggressive or deliberately ignorant. It's also a very, very common fact pattern, based on my circle of girlfriends who all kept their name.