"How long I think the marriage will last"!? Jesus Christ dude!Emilox The Great said:It depends on her name and how long i think the marriage will last.
But i kinda like my name its really scandinavian, though i dont think anyone beyond scandinavia can pronounce "Juul" correctly. But "Petersen" is quite easy to pronounce, i think.
...actually, you pretty much summed up everything I would have had to say here! =D I'm in exactly the same boat, down to the sister thing and everything...IndomitableSam said:As a woman, I don't think I would, as there is only my sister and I left in the family to carry on our last name. No one else has it anymore, and I would feel terrible letting it die out. It's not too common of a name.
Also, these days, your name is everywhere - it's not easy career-wise to change you name especially when you have a lot of contacts and such. The amount of legwork you have to do to inform everyone just strikes me as way too difficult.
Plus all those extra fees to update everything else with a name-change. Not worth it.
You could always just not get married.Susan Arendt said:If my circumstances were different, I would've, sure. I already had a body of work under my maiden name when I got married, and I would've lost a lot of professional traction if I changed it. I changed my name the first time I got married, and it was hell to get it back when I got divorced. (You'd think it would be the other way around.)
It actually causes a bit of trouble that my husband and I don't share a last name. It just confuses people; I'll call, say, the bank to talk about our account, and they'll be like "um, can you prove you're really his wife?"
Actually, men take paternity leave sometimes. Paternity leave exists, it's a thing, you just don't see it much because of a few thousand years of gender stereotypes.Regnes said:There aren't a lot of things a guy can say to really support the notion other than it's just tradition. However, it's kind of important to have one name per family unit. I'm not going to have children who do not bare my name, and I will not have children who do not bare the name of their mother either. "Hello Mrs. Findley, I see you're here to pick up Wesley Senger, are you his legal guardian?"
Merging names is also a stupid concept that I wish would go away. Ok, so you want my children to be named Senger-Whatever, it looks dumb on paper already, and what do you expect them to do when they get married? Are we going to have a bunch of Senger-Whatever-Yadda-Yaddas grandchildren running around? It's a retarded concept, and if it really caught on, we would have names that take up an entire paragraph. Unless of course somebody opted to just sacrifice their name or something, that would work, and it does work.
One name per family, it works, it makes sense, let's keep it that way. The way I see it, it's a conflict that is bound to come up, who will give up their name, well the tradition is easy to follow and eliminates that problem. Oh, and when I said I didn't have anything to say to back up the tradition, I didn't say I had nothing to say. The man is the head of the family, there is no disputing this. It's a biological gender role, women take care of the children, men hold the fort. You don't see men taking paternity leave while the mothers go to work and feed the family. We are the head of the family, the family is in our name.
Well, sure, but I wanted to. I love being married.Grey Day for Elcia said:You could always just not get married.Susan Arendt said:If my circumstances were different, I would've, sure. I already had a body of work under my maiden name when I got married, and I would've lost a lot of professional traction if I changed it. I changed my name the first time I got married, and it was hell to get it back when I got divorced. (You'd think it would be the other way around.)
It actually causes a bit of trouble that my husband and I don't share a last name. It just confuses people; I'll call, say, the bank to talk about our account, and they'll be like "um, can you prove you're really his wife?"
OT: I couldn't physically care any less about my name. So, sure.
A married woman enjoying marriage? MADNESS!Susan Arendt said:Well, sure, but I wanted to. I love being married.Grey Day for Elcia said:You could always just not get married.Susan Arendt said:If my circumstances were different, I would've, sure. I already had a body of work under my maiden name when I got married, and I would've lost a lot of professional traction if I changed it. I changed my name the first time I got married, and it was hell to get it back when I got divorced. (You'd think it would be the other way around.)
It actually causes a bit of trouble that my husband and I don't share a last name. It just confuses people; I'll call, say, the bank to talk about our account, and they'll be like "um, can you prove you're really his wife?"
OT: I couldn't physically care any less about my name. So, sure.
Well, it depends on what it means to you personally (and your spouse, of course). I like the feeling of permanence, that someone cares enough about me to want to stick around in such a declarative fashion. Marriage isn't a universal truth, or anything - it means different things to different people.Grey Day for Elcia said:A married woman enjoying marriage? MADNESS!Susan Arendt said:Well, sure, but I wanted to. I love being married.Grey Day for Elcia said:You could always just not get married.Susan Arendt said:If my circumstances were different, I would've, sure. I already had a body of work under my maiden name when I got married, and I would've lost a lot of professional traction if I changed it. I changed my name the first time I got married, and it was hell to get it back when I got divorced. (You'd think it would be the other way around.)
It actually causes a bit of trouble that my husband and I don't share a last name. It just confuses people; I'll call, say, the bank to talk about our account, and they'll be like "um, can you prove you're really his wife?"
OT: I couldn't physically care any less about my name. So, sure.
Could I ask why you like being married? Just out of curiosity. Like, not being a couple or anything, but specifically being married.
I've never cared for it and I don't really get it.