Will you change your name when you get married?

Will you change your name when you get married?

  • Absolutely!

    Votes: 62 54.4%
  • Only if his name isn't weird or too long

    Votes: 6 5.3%
  • I will hyphenate our names

    Votes: 27 23.7%
  • I'm keeping my maiden name and that's final!

    Votes: 19 16.7%

  • Total voters
    114
  • Poll closed .
I changed my maiden name and kept my middle name.

My middle name is the family name for me. All of the oldest girls on my mom's side have the same middle name- Marie. My grandma Marie was the first girl on that side of our family born after slavery ended so it's tradition that all the oldest girls get her name in some way.

Keeping that name means more to me than my maiden name. Hyphens aren't my thing either. Plus my DH's name is short and sweet- lol
 
I will :)
Don't care how annoying his last name is, I'll change it.
Its like your starting a new chapter in your life.
 
I really DON'T like my SO's last name. I feel like I've worked really hard a get a few degrees with MY name on it. I've always seen myself being called Dr. My Last Name. We've discussed this, since we plan to marry (not anytime soon), and he's totally against it. I told him I'd be willing to compromise and hyphenate, and let the children only carry his last name. Time will tell, but I'm pretty sure I'll end up hyphenating.
 
Growing up, I hated my last name. When I got married, I leapt at the chance to change it. Now that I am divorced, I went back to my maiden name as part of the decree. Maturity and the lack of teasing schoolchildren has helped me to embrace my maiden name.

If I remarry, I will be professionally and legally known as Ms. Arrrbeee but personally I will be known as Ms. New Dudes Last Name.

This was my situation as well.. although I did like my maiden. Once I got divorced I changed back to my maiden name, although quite reluctantly.
 
I will hyphenate my name only because i already have a little boy and would not want him to feel as if he didnt belong...and every one else name in the family would be different ..and i wouldnt wanna change his last name because i would like him to carry it on..
 
I would change. Not because I particularly want to have his name, but because I don't like my name. If I had a more traditional last name, I would not bother changing.
 
I kept my name. The kids have his name. That was part of my vetting process - do you have a problem with my keeping my name? I crossed guys off the list if they had a problem. I am totally serious about that. One guy was trying to go out with me and when I asked that BEFORE WE EVEN WENT OUT he tried to convince me (Biblically) why I should. Miss me all the way with that. This was not an option.

DH said he didn't care. About 3 months before the wedding, he mentioned it; said a few things. I told him AGAIN - this is not an option. He was going through some other things jobwise so he was trying to be all macho in other areas. That passed and now he REALLY sees the benefit of it - especially business wise. I told him: You can pat me on the back now. :D

Only other people find a problem with it. Since they are not adding any value to my life, they can kick rocks.
 
THe cause of many arguments in my last relationship. Current SO is not having it....I wanna keep my name, but Hyphenation appears to be in my future. Ive got to keep peace in my home....so compromise I will.
 
Hyphenated married name fight heats up on Facebook

Conversations with my man about our future always produce juicy material that I turn around and exploit for purely editorial — and, OK, sometimes basic entertainment — reasons. A recent chat about hyphenating my last name kicked up dust as we talked about my dreams of finishing (which means I’d actually have to start) my PhD within the next five years. In the heat of my daydreaming, I took my would-be name for a test drive. “Dr. Janelle Harris-Williams,” I swooned like a giddy extra in the “Beauty School Dropout” scene of Grease. Boyfriend 4.0 jutted his bottom jaw, something he does when he’s about to serve up a verbal smackdown. “Harris-Williams!” he scoffed. “I think you mean Dr. Janelle Williams.”
Seems he takes offense to the idea of me tacking his last name on to the one I already have. The move — according to him — says I’m wishy-washy about my commitment and (gasp) that I’m not ready to leave my family and be a wife. When I introduced the subject for discussion on Facebook, turns out plenty of folks from both genders side with his opinion. I didn’t tell him that, though.
There is no level-headed reason why a woman should have to abandon her family’s last name in order to prove her fidelity and allegiance to her man. None whatsoever. The concept is as archaic and patriarchal as, oh I don’t know, forgoing your dreams to be an apron-sporting housewife a la June Cleaver or pretending to be an airhead to appease your guy’s fragile ego. Puh-lease.
According to the recently released 2010 Real Weddings Survey from The Knot, only 6 percent of newlywed women opted to hyphenate their names — the same number reported on the stats from the year before. Responses from the roughly 20,000 brides polled overwhelmingly favored taking their hubby’s name, to the tune of 86 percent.
More from The Stir: 50 Reasons Why Marriage Rocks
So it’s not necessarily a fire-hot trend. So I’m in a bit of a minority. At least I’m not flying completely solo. “We definitely see the conversation because everyone has an opinion on it. No one is really right because it’s such a personal decision,” offers Anja Winikka, an obviously brilliant individual who happens to be an editor at The Knot. “As years go by and couples wait longer to get married, more women are choosing to hyphenate because of their careers, especially when people are looking for them on Google.”
Indeed, those of us who have worked hellishly to build up some steam in our respective careers also have professional grounds to hold on to our original surnames. If Eva Parker or Jada Smith had a new flick coming out, the crickets would be chirping and we’d gloss over them like they were as generic and nondescript as Jane Jones. But add the “Longoria” and the “Pinkett,” respectively, the bells and whistles of familiarity go off, and the general public might contemplate going to see the movie. Might.
Because the average age of the American bride is now 27 (up from 25 last year, but who’s counting?), many women don’t want the hassle of converting their longstanding professional identities — email addresses, monogrammed attaches, and all — to a whole new name. "Most of my clients are businesswomen, speakers, or high-level professionals and have built a brand with their names,” says Christine Pembleton, an author who is also president of the aptly named relationship coaching firm, Ready to Be a Wife. “However,” she adds, “I had no problem changing my name. In fact, it was one of the things I looked forward to when I got married." Hmph.
More from The Stir: The Marriage Mistake We Should Not Repeat
So exactly what does a man have to give up in order to marry a woman? Yet we’re expected to disassociate ourselves from the very families who shaped us into the women men fall in love with and want to marry. If I had been born male, I would’ve had no choice but to carry on the Harris name. But because I have an innie, not an outie, I’m forced to show my Post-Marital Pride by sloughing off part of my identity.
Not I, said the brown cow. Can’t my hyphen rep for both my past and my future — and have a nice ring to it in the process?

http://shine.yahoo.com/channel/sex/hyphenated-married-name-fight-heats-up-on-facebook-2457045/



Interesting article.Some of the comments are ridiculous. I'm about to finish my MA thesis and it will have my maiden name, since I'm not married yet. I still plan on hyphenating. I just think if a man judges how much I'm committed to him by how willing I am to drop the name I was born with, he's not the man for me.
 
Absolutely! No need for a hyphen or for me to adopt my maiden as my middle name. I want everyone in my household to have the same last name.
 
I will, but I wouldn't mind a hyphenated last name. The only reason I'm saying no is because it always causes so much confusion as to which name you are referenced by and in what order. Since I work in the medical field, it's always annoying to try to find the hyphenated names or decide how it was filed by the first or the last last name. And it's annoying to call that person's name too, LOL. So I'll just take my husband's.
 
At first I wanted to hyphenate it. I didn't know it bothered my husband as much as it did, so I dropped the hyphened name a few years after we were married.
 
When I was married I hyphenated, but next time I will just add his name. I don't ever plan on dropping my family name.
 
Yep, I did. It was mostly out of vanity. My maiden name is long and I always hated that. My DH has a nice short last name. Ever since I was a little girl, I always looked forward to getting married to someone with a last name like "Lee". lol
 
I used to be all 'nawwww' but now will more than likely change it, or...OR... do the HRC thing and take his name and give myself my last name as a middle, since I don't have one.
 
I'm not too fond of my present last name so I will drop it with a quickness... unless he has a ***** last name, then we might have a problem.
 
yes i did...i am not a big fan of the hyphen thing--for what? lol
his family name has quite a reputation and opens many doors so i was all in with accepting his name...
also there are alotta men in my family so our family name will continue to be carried on for yrs to come...
 
I'll keep my name. I like it the way it is and if I ever get married, if my husband is so concerned about sharing names then he can take mine.
 
I voted to keep my maiden name. If I got married when I was younger, I would have no problem changing my last name. Now that I am older and established in my profession and known by my last name, I won't be changing it if I get married in the future. But I won't say never....

For same reason as you stated, I did not change mine. I just did not want to have my professional name changed, and the change of documents etc, I would have had to deal with. I also love my name and hubby does not mind.
He even suggested giving our son a double barrelled surname, I refused this, as I believed my kids should just have their father's surname.
 
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If I was you, I would seriously re-consider that. That can really hurt a guy's feelings. You can at least do a "-". I mean honestly, would you want you kids (if you plan on having them), have a different last name than you?

Unless the person is famous, I would be pissed if they didn't change their last name. I do not know that many guys out there that feel different. I know I would look at those guys like they are weird.

Stay posted!!

I think it depends on the guy, I kept mine and has never been an issue in our household. I think if it was an issue I probably would have added it on to mine. So I do believe it depends on the relationship before you got married.
 
Yes, I will give up mine. It's a particularly "hard" last name for most to say/spell, and I'm told it LOOKS like my first name, so it's more irksome than anything.
 
My plan is to hyphenate my first and middle names and add his last name it will look like:

FirstName-MiddleName MaidenName HisName

I was named for my grandmothers and dropping one their names is out.

I'm doing the same. My middle name was my maternal great-grandmother's so I'm not dropping it either.

So I'll have: First Name Middle Name MaidenName-HisName

I don't care about having a long name. I don't see it affecting me much since I'm going by my maiden name professionally and his name socially.
 
I REALLY wanted to hyphenate my last name since his is common but he would have been SUPER offended. So I dropped my unique last name and went to a common one (ie; Jones, Johnson, Williams etc) yall get the point.
 
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