Friday, February 6, 2009

Iron maiden names

I get the whole idea behind marriage, at least the legal idea. Without regard to modern thinking, more often than not, a new bride will take the last name of her husband, thereby legally shedding her maiden or former name forever -- or until an ugly situation warrants the resurrection of her former self.

For a few, it's even a bi-polar struggle for the bride's very soul. She's in love and wants to be married, but also does not want to lose a part of herself in the transaction. In this case, a hyphen is deployed to bridge the two competing last names, immediately informing the world about the nature, structure, and rigidity of this blessed holy matrimony. It also defines a winner and loser in the marriage. The bride comes away with two last names, thereby constituting a major victory in the union, quickly reducing the groom in short time to a position of weakness. His journey from manly man to crushed, empty shell of a man is well on its way.

For most, though, it's not such an epic battle. The union resembles more of the norm. Wedding >>>> legal name change >>>> cake, dancing, douche-bag dj, drunk mother-in-law >>>> happily ever after with a brand new last name, or until the champagne wears off.

Happily-married-facebook-chick presents a real problem for facebook users. Somewhere between high school graduation and 12 seconds ago, this culprit has morphed into a completely new and unsettling entity, like a moth fluttering about your porch light on a warm summer evening. They just arrive... and flutter. You know it's a moth.. so what?

A common first name is presented in tandem with a common last name (usually). But when rendered side-by-side it might as well be Japanese, or algebra. If you're lucky at all, you received a working profile picture (not the failed facebook silhouette... see yesterday's entry). Sadly, though, even the profile picture can disappoint because happily-married-facebook-chick forgot to account for various factors associated with aging, or used her kids for a profile picture instead.

Maiden name to the rescue
Just put your maiden name on your profile. Do it. Don't be ashamed; it's just a name. But, it's also the key to a more rewarding and life changing facebook experience. It's not a big secret. It's only your past. And we love you. And you're not even being a hyphen chick if you decide to share it with us. Win win.

Practice with me: "First maiden married = name."

That said, for all parties, the more uncommon hyphen approach actually suits the facebook experience better. All information is on the table. Nothing is left to chance. And thanks to the advantage of punctuation, hyphen-facebook-name-chick is already a force to be reckoned with; a presence in the facebook universe. For hyphen-facebook-name-chick, a service is being performed for those she wants to friend that despise thinking too hard.

Now they know exactly who hypen-facebook-name-chick is, and they're probably laughing at her.

Good times.

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