I kept my own name and had no angst about it. Husband had angst about it and feels like he has to justify it to people. Which, as far as I'm concerned, is his issue and he can deal with it how he likes.
I didn't get much crap from people, but I do still get mail and checks written to me as Dana HisLastName.
Yeah, ND's sister writes holiday gift checks to me with ND's last name. Eh. The bank still cashes it.
For sure, sign whatever name they write on the checks!
Mom took Dad's last name. (Eh, it was 1959.) The year after they were married, her MiL sent her a birthday check made out to Mom's maiden name. Message received, Grandma.
Yeah, names are fraught.
I can just barely imagine getting married. I can't imagine changing my name. But then, I'm 45, so I've had it for what will be at least half my life. Probably more.
(Unless the last name was Plantagenet. That could be cool. )
And fuck, I'll have to change my signature. That's a pain.
My signature is cursive E S scrawl, all run together. So I couldn't change my last name to anything that doesn't start with a big loop.
I don't have a strong attachment to my last name, being as it's my father's name and he didn't have much attachment to me. But I never liked the idea of
having
to change it to my husband's name. I decided if my hypothetical future husband's name is cooler than mine, I'll change it; otherwise we'll have to have a talk.
What I'm leaning towards the most (right now) is to make my last name my middle name and take Tim's last name. But the thing is, I know when women do that, they frequently end up defaulting to Firstname HusbandsLastname, rather than Firstname Maidenname HusbandsLastname.
I did that. And the shorthand does tend to go to the Nickname and ex's Last name, true. But I use my full name a lot. And for a three letter initial, I've even trained the most resistant family to use it.
I didn't like my birth middle name, it started with the same same letter as my maiden and it felt right.
I honestly kept after divorce because First Married could be anyone in an age that I could see would be dominated by the Internet and widely-available information. It feels nicely anonymous. But legally all three are probably exclusively me. So I had both something distinct but something that doesn't freak me out with Google.
I have, since moving back to where I was known by maiden, been sure to use the whole three word name much more often. Because then people here remember why they think they should know me.
My signature is cursive E S scrawl, all run together. So I couldn't change my last name to anything that doesn't start with a big loop.
Tim's signature is literally a big T and then a scrawled dash of a line.
You may all begin forging things with his signature now.
t edit
I guess I could be Mrs. S scrawly dash of a line.
Thanks, Hec. The shortness of both last names was a factor.
My signature has become more scrawly since I hyphenated. My hand still wants to stop before the dash.
Steph, what if you made his last name your middle name, instead of the other way around?
My mother really could do that, Tep.
Working in title has made her an excellent "forger"(Which I mostly think about regarding that one West Wing where the office worker can write like Bartlet.)
About the name: Don't know...I joke that I'd be thrilled to drop this one, but it is my byline, so...(as if anyone wants to share a name with me. Sigh.)
I don't know...do what you feel. I will always think of you as Steph Lang anyway.