Anonymous wrote:This is all so weird. OP you played the race card. I think you have issues.
Anonymous wrote:I know at least one couple who have done it. If I hadn't been told, I never would have known. I don't think it's a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You are so not sorry.
I did you a favor. There are people....lots of them....like me....that will consider your child as odd....a kid to be politely observed before being welcomed into their child's life. I don't think your idea regarding naming your child is "lovely". And...I don't think people that say your unique style of naming your child is "lovely"....really think that. It is weird. So, if you want to bring your child into this world with the burden of being "weird"....so be it. Go for it. I think it is selfish.
You would be less welcoming to a child whose last name was a combination of its parents' last names? (Assuming that you even knew this to be so.)
Oh wow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP, please please please tell us your child's first name. I would bet so much $$$ that it's something really new age and/or a traditional name spelled weird.
Our top choices are Eloise and Louisa (in honor of a Louise)
PP, you owe the OP so much $$$. Pay up, please.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. People who know people who have done this - where were they located? DC has some rules about what last name can go on the birth certificate, so I'm wondering if they will give us a hard time about it...
http://cssd.dc.gov/page/birth-certificates
"The child’s last name on a birth certificate
District law determines the last name (or “surname”) that can be given to a child. The last name can be:
The mother’s surname when the child was born;
The father’s surname when the child was born;
Both parents’ names, recorded in any order, hyphenated or unhyphenated; or
Any surname to which either the mother or father has a familial connection. The District’s Vital Records Division requires a parent to sign an affidavit attesting to the familial connection.
For the father’s last name to be the child’s last name, he has to be recognized by law as the father. "
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hyphenation is more common than making up a new last name...and is less bizarre--especially when neither parent is willing to take the new last name.
Hyphenating isn't a nuisance. My name is hyphenated, and so are my kids. The only (rare) issue is when someone alphabetizes the last name under Jones instead of Smith (Smith-Jones).
What do people with hyphenated names do when they get married and have kids?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP, please please please tell us your child's first name. I would bet so much $$$ that it's something really new age and/or a traditional name spelled weird.
Our top choices are Eloise and Louisa (in honor of a Louise)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The prior mayor of LA, Antio Villaraigosa did this--
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antonio_Villaraigosa#Personal_life
Personally, I'm not a fan because I wouldn't do it myself-- my last name and my spouse's last name are important to us. Our kids have a hyphenated last name. But I know there are others who don't place a ton of value on family history (no judgment) so why not create something new.
Actually, this guy did it the only way that makes sense. He and his wife changed their last names to the Potmanteau name and then gave that to their children. As in a FAMILY NAME. Like, this is the "Thomwell" family. Instead of Mr. Thompson, Mrs. Maxwell, and their son Larlo Thomwell.
I'm laughing even imagining that. It's so pretentious and dumb.
Pretentious of what, exactly?
Also, why must there be a FAMILY NAME? What is nonsensical about Larla Thompson, Larlo Maxwell, and Ava/Liam Thomwell?
OP here. I kind of thought most people would take some issue with it which is why my initial feeling was not to do it. But, since posting, I think I've decided that I don't really care if people roll their eyes at us while the child is young... more concerned about the name working for an adult, and I'm not seeing any reason it wouldn't. There are practical reasons it makes sense to have the same name as a family, but either way we will have two different last names in the family because my husband and I aren't changing ours.
OP, please please please tell us your child's first name. I would bet so much $$$ that it's something really new age and/or a traditional name spelled weird.
Anonymous wrote:Hyphenation is more common than making up a new last name...and is less bizarre--especially when neither parent is willing to take the new last name.
Hyphenating isn't a nuisance. My name is hyphenated, and so are my kids. The only (rare) issue is when someone alphabetizes the last name under Jones instead of Smith (Smith-Jones).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hyphenation is more common than making up a new last name...and is less bizarre--especially when neither parent is willing to take the new last name.
Hyphenating isn't a nuisance. My name is hyphenated, and so are my kids. The only (rare) issue is when someone alphabetizes the last name under Jones instead of Smith (Smith-Jones).
What do people with hyphenated names do when they get married and have kids?
Anonymous wrote:Hyphenation is more common than making up a new last name...and is less bizarre--especially when neither parent is willing to take the new last name.
Hyphenating isn't a nuisance. My name is hyphenated, and so are my kids. The only (rare) issue is when someone alphabetizes the last name under Jones instead of Smith (Smith-Jones).