There are 89 articles on this title. You are reading the article ranked and rated #1 by Helium's members.
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| Switch | 62% | 846 votes | Total: 1369 votes | |
| Keep | 38% | 523 votes |
It's an archaic custom that is no longer relevant. In today's society, women don't leave their family to literally go live with their husband's family, nor are they financially dependent upon men. Your name is your history, your family, your heritage. There's no reason to forsake your name to a man's name in homage to an outdated custom.
Many times I've searched online to find old friends, and while I can find many of the men I grew up with, most female friends from my youth are lost to me. And as women develop their careers and achieve accolades that should enable them to advance their career, they too often get "hidden" from former colleagues who could help them network on to even bigger and better achievements.
More tactically, I'd ask men - have any of you ever gone through the name change process after a marriage? You need to bring your marriage license to both the DMV (and wait in long lines), to the Social Security administration (and wait in long lines), and contact your bank, your mortgage lender or landlord, your auto loan lien holder, your credit card issuers, the electric company, the water and garbage companies, the cable company, the phone company, and your cell phone company. And with your employer you will need to coordinate with the HR department to update your insurance and your 401k, the payroll department to update the name on your paycheck and W2, and even the IT department will join the process to change your email address. Throughout you'll be asked to fill out countless forms that take up hours and hours of your time. Additionally, you'll need to update any legal documents you may have in place. I'd ask the men who've insisted your wife change their name to assume your name - did any of you help your new wife complete this process? If so, perhaps you're a man worth changing a name for. But I suspect there aren't many who were willing to go stand side-by-side with their bride on their lunch hour (for considerably more than an hour) at the DMV or the Social Security Administration. By the time women are done with all of this, any romanticism they may have felt about taking their husband's name is long gone.
And for the ladies, I hope you never have to go through a divorce, requiring you to work the entire process backward to where you started, should you choose to go back to your maiden name, as many women do. It's one of the little known secrets of the full package of hell known as "divorce." One more humiliation you, and only you, as the woman, needs to go through when the marriage falls apart. There's no doubt you'll be filling out all those forms and standing in those lines all by yourself then.
It's time for new customs. The simplest of course is for the husband and wife to each keep their own family name and agree upon which name any children will bear. What's really so wrong with a married couple having two different last names? Isn't what's inside the marriage what really matters? Not what other people think? Are we still so backward that we worry about what the matrons of society think of us? Or what grandma will think? Are we living our lives for ourselves or for society and our grandma?
For those willing to take the leap and go through the effort to change their name for their family to feel united under one name, why not a hyphenated name for the couple? Or what if the couple together decided to take one or the other family name, rather than automatically selecting the man's family name? Radical thoughts I'm sure, but women, we got the vote, we got the right to equality in the workplace, why not equality in your name as a married woman?
Learn more about this author, Esther Andrews.
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Choosing whether to keep your family's name, a name that has identified you during your childhood and in your single days
by Robin Landry
When I married the first time at age twenty-four, I briefly experimented with using my maiden name and my new husband's
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