The Eye of the Beholder

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

By Any Other Name I Am Far Less Sweet

I am told some girls plan their weddings as pre-teens. By the time of their first prom, they have selected the flowers, the dress and the topper for their cake...

Though I was not detail oriented enough as a middle schooler to select a napkin fold for the-big-day, I thought about marriage too. Mostly, I thought about what my name might be post-ceremony. I wanted to retain my identity (all of my identity), but I also wanted to share a last name with my husband and children. So, I developed a simple plan. With a pre-marital name of Miss Vegas Sue Babe, my planned post-nuptial name would be Mrs VegasSue Babe X. That was my plan. A first-middle-name sandwich whereby my maiden name would become my legal middle name. That was the master plan.

You may not be surprised to learn that the Federal government does not consider marriage a sufficient excuse to change your first name (I sort of saw that coming too). So, I left the social security office (2 hours later...) with a new name, Mrs Vegas Babe X. Childhood dreams slightly dented, I was excited for my new life as a wife. And then I met that dastardly dude (must be a MAN), The DMV...

I learned that in the state of Nevada The DMV does not recognize marriage as a sufficient rationale to change your MIDDLE name. The clerk at the counter (1 hour later) informed me that "The DMV doesn't do that any more... 'Babe' is not your legal middle name, because it is not on your birth certificate."

When I pointed out that "X" was not on my birth certificate either, I was chastised for trying to bamboozle The DMV into believing that "Babe" was my middle name when I had no legal documentation of said middle name.

Ah-ha! Now I had The DMV on the ropes. Smiling, I pulled my shiny, new social security card from my pocket and informed the clerk that "the federal government recognizes "Babe" as my legal middle name."

Without missing a beat, she informed me that "The DMV is NOT the federal government."

I'll be honest. I took the only license she would issue, though the photo is all puffy, red eyes from the tantrum I threw in the bathroom. Cheated out of my identity, I was most angry with myself for giving up without even first writing my congresswoman to protest an irrational rule designed chiefly to harass newlywed females... but I had to have a license if I wanted to cash all of the wedding checks made out to Mrs Vegas X.

In defense of my good standing in the feminist-babes club, the establishment had beat down my will-to-self-actualize with all of those hours of waiting in line... smelly, noisy waiting rooms... crying babies... wasted lunch hours...

As if the shame were not punishment enough, I soon found that my worldly assets were essentially frozen until I went back to social security office to get a new card that matched my shiny, new drivers license... the one with the hideous photo.

This I know. With one hand on a tattered copy of The Feminist Mystique I vow to avenge the death of my childhood dream to name myself. I'll get you, Mr The DMV. You can run but you can't hide!

6 Comments:

Blogger Caprene said...

If it makes you feel any better, when my sister-in-law went to get her new social and license, she discovered that the hospital misspelled her name on her birth certificate. Her whole life she'd been Nichole (with an H) - her school records, her current drivers license and social, her marriage license - everything had the H. No one had ever noticed the hospital got it wrong and everything had just gone off the forms she completed spelling her name with an H.

She married my brother 3 months or so after 9/11 so the offices were throwing a huge huff about her name spelling - because, you know, she looks a lot like a terrorist with her blond hair, blue eyes, 5'8" model like frame. It took about 2 years to get a new license and social with her married name (and correctly spelled first name).

She feels your pain I'm sure.

9:40 AM  
Blogger MrsVegasBabe said...

I sincerely believe that the government works to make your name change experience as horrible as possible in an effort to discourage divorce.

I told Mr. Man that I am never changing my name again!

Side editorial: the face of terrorism cannot be easily profiled. :)

11:18 AM  
Blogger Timid Tripper said...

Wow! Those Nevada DMV people are sticklers. After realizing I'd never win the hyphenated last name argument, and (wrongly) thinking it didn't really matter, I completely gave up my maiden name. Since I have no middle name, my SS card has only my first name and my married last name on it (no initial or anything for my maiden name). On the one hand, when I applied to grad school none of my previous professors recognized me even though I put my maiden name on all my applications. On the other hand, in the Church most people don't really get the maiden name thing anyway. There was a gal in our ward in California who kept her maiden name and didn't use her husband's name and that really threw people for a loop.

6:41 PM  
Blogger MrsVegasBabe said...

My mom and my sister BOTH have their maiden name as their middle name.

I almost had Mr Man convinced that we should both change our names... We were going to be Mr and Mr A (Just the initial), because I told him I always wanted to have the last initial A and he could choose any A name.

I actually knew a couple who BOTH hyphenated and that seemed like a good compromise, but someone pointed out that it only works for one generation or you wind up with a family named Mr & Mrs. Smith-Jones-Stanford-Baxter.

7:52 PM  
Blogger MrsVegasBabe said...

This comment has been removed by the author.

7:52 PM  
Blogger Dragon's Back said...

Hell~ why change it to begin with? I will forever be AJR! Not that I have a man, but if I did. . .

7:48 AM  

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