Should You Keep Your Married Name After A Divorce?
One issue often overlooked during a divorce, is whether or not to keep your married last name. I remember my lawyer asking me if I wanted to continue to use my married name during a divorce hearing. It was honestly something I hadn’t given much thought to at the time. With all of the divorce drama going on, it had slipped my mind that I had the option to revert back to my maiden name.
I initially decided to return to my maiden name and asked for it to be changed at my final divorce hearing. But then something strange happened. As the months passed, I continued to use my married last name, putting off changing my driver's license and credit cards. Something just did not feel right about changing my name back to the name I once used long ago. I felt like I wasn’t that person anymore, yet I also did not feel comfortable using my married last name. I certainly was not the same person who used that name either.
In the end I decided to give myself a new last name. One that I choose. I shortened my married last name and gave myself a brand new identity. I went to court and legally changed my name. It felt right and it was empowering to begin my new life after divorce with my own chosen identity, not the name I was born with and not the name I got from being married.
There are several issues to consider when deciding whether or not to keep your married name after a divorce. Here are few:
1. Your children. Do you want to avoid confusion at school by keeping the same last name as your kids?
2. Paperwork. Changing your name means changing your driver's license, bank accounts, credit cards and countless other documents. Expect to spend time and energy taking care of this.
3. Have you established yourself professionally with your married name? If so you may not want to change it.
In the end, make sure it is your own decision to change or not change your last name. Don't give into pressure from your ex, who may object to you using your married name. It is perfectly legal to continue to use your married name after a divorce. If you no longer wish to use your married name, then make sure you are comfortable going back to your maiden name. If not, you may want to do like I did and create your very own new last name.
2 comments:
I love, love, love this article. This is a tough question for women to answer. I remember when my mother was going through her divorce she asked me what I would prefer. I thought it would be best at the time that she keep my dads last name just for things like taking me to the doctor or teacher's meeting. As a kid it really was all about me of course and I love the fact that my mother never lost sight of that.
On this video you can see 4 thirty-something women talk about this topic and give their opinions:
http://firstwivesworld.com/community/the-d-word/the-d-word/the-d-word-changing-names
You can catch it on youtube here also:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JP86gjj9zB8
All my best,
AntonioFWW
I love this article too. It is such a poignent question. There are so many people that look at it so may different ways, it makes it all the more complicated. My current's mother was married, divorced, then remarried. She was later divorced and reverted back to her first married name, not her maiden name. She said she just liked it better and she was a judge at the time and it was easier to go back to what people knew her as when she was Judge B. I watched the video on www.firstwivesworld.com and found their different, yet similiar perspectives very intersting. One women said she didn't like the idea of being "owned" by someone like you are their property. That is such a jump from the old ideaology when women did not think twice about changing their name once married.
Just my two cents.
Ann Marie
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