I'm convinced I could start a thread about drier lint and it would make 5 pages within two days. Y'all are in sad and when you think you're " ting on me" you're actually bowing to me. No bull , I'm flattered, but off.
Lose your job for a week.
You mean "dryer lint"?
No wonder she didn't want the kid to have your last name, you probably cannot even spell it.
http://public.wsu.edu/~brians/errors/drier.html
lol linking to the proper spelling of dryer
I could spell circles around you though, I could also fish circles around you tbh tbqh.
We did write it exactly as we wanted it. The problem is, you're talking to someone who's going to tell someone else. And when one of you pushed out the baby (luckily not me) and the other one stayed up the whole time with the wife and was having severe lack of sleep issues, sometimes you forget to explain it that crucial 5th time.
We didn't find out until income tax time when we tried to claim my son. The name we gave didn't match with the social security number we were giving, and every time we looked at his card, it looked good. It then dawned on us what happened and I looked at the wife and just gave her the "I told you so" look.
To this day I have to sign affidavits and forms showing that he is indeed my son, even though my last name is the second half of his last name. ing insurance will try to do anything to get out of insuring someone.
My daughter's is correct because we made sure to tell them more than 5 times how we wanted it. But in the end, I think it will just be easier to remove the mom's last name and just keep mine, especially since I'm raising them, thereby eliminating any real need to have her last name on those official do ents.
Oh, it does generate extra paperwork. Sometimes I just feel like telling the people, "My last name is still there, it's just half of his last name. But it's still there" whenever I try to do anything with him.
ed up part is it's actually harder for me to do official things on his behalf instead of the mother doing it. I don't make excuses for dad's who run off, but our society makes things twice as hard for the dad to do things (happens with my daughter too, so it's not the name) than it would be for the mom.
And when we're in person, I feel like telling people who give me the look before handing me the extra forms, "Look at my son. Now look at me. If I showed you a picture of me at age 5, you couldn't tell the difference. That's my son."
UPDATE: just to put a neat little bow on this thread... You MUST leagally change the childs name in order to submit the paperwork that Kori suggested. So apparently there is no way around the filing fees for the 'order to change childs name'. No big deal, got the name changed a couple weeks ago, now all I need to do is ammend the birth certificate by sending off the request and including an official copy of the 'order to change childs name'. So thanks everyone for your advice!
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