I didn’t change my surname when I got married. That was something I never considered doing. I find the whole idea of women changing their surname to their husband’s surname offensive. To me, it’s like symbolising the loss of your identity – the idea that you are no longer your own person, you are now simply a possession of your husband’s.
Ugh.
When I got engaged a while back, my fiance was totally cool about the idea of me keeping my surname. (I wouldn’t have married him otherwise.) Anyway, he doesn’t have a great surname to work with. Combined with my first name, it sounds like a stutter. Think Bec Eckert.
That’s not it, but it’s something like that. That’s how awkward it is to say. Even if I was a believer in women changing their surname to their husband’s, I would have hesitated.
On the subject of annoying mother-in-laws, this is a guide on how to handle toxic relatives. Robin Bailey and Bec Sparrow speak to listener Lucy, who was brave enough to sever the relationship she had with her toxic father, on The Well. Post continues after audio.
Obviously, I met his parents before the wedding.
“Our other daughter-in-law hyphenated her surname when she got married,” his mother told me. “I’m glad you won’t be doing anything silly like that.”
No, something sillier.
“I’m actually planning to keep my surname,” I told her, pointedly.
I thought that awkward incident would be the end of it. But it wasn’t.