Post Offices, eh? But those aside, it’s now been a year since Claire and I changed our surnames to the letter “Q”. Here’s a quick look back:
The Good Things
- It still feels like it’s “ours,” and something that’s ours alone – a great sense of identity and togetherness that we probably wouldn’t have gotten in any other way.
- It still makes people’s minds boggle, even after they get past the “disbelief” stage. It still baffles me how many people try to “guess what it stands for,” even after being told it doesn’t stand for anything.
- The junk mailers still don’t seem to have caught up with my new name, which makes filtering my postal mail very easy – it’s it’s for my old name, it’s junk; if it’s for my new name, it’s not.
- It really wasn’t very hard to do!
- The game of “comeing up with children’s names for Claire and I” seems to have gone out of fashion at last. I still feel that the winner was “Barbie.”
- I’m yet to find anybody with a shorter name than me, although I suspect that at least one exists (there are plenty with same length of name, including Ron Ng, Wu Man, and many other people with romanised Chinese names).
The Bad Things
- Some companies (and, in particular, their computer systems) seem to have a great deal of difficulty with my surname. It hasn’t caused any problems as yet; just inconveniences – and I’m on several databases as “Qq”, “Qu”, or “Q[space][space][space].”
- We spend longer at customs desks at British airports than we used to. Those guys have no sense of humour.
- I spend longer spelling my name to people on the phone than I used to, which feels unusual considering that my old surname had at least two spellings of which mine was the least common.
- My mobile phone contract provider still refuse to believe that my first name has changed, too. They have no problem with my last name. Weird.
So, no: I don’t regret it, it’s been fun and fabulous and it’s something special for Claire and I to share, and I fully expect to have this surname for the remainder of my life… although I am sometimes tempted by the idea of a one-letter first name, too… :-)
Edit, 22/03/2008: Fixed a spelling mistake.
…but Ron Ng and Wu Man are both one character longer than Dan Q…
I assume you’ve seen xkcd number 327?
Ooh! Ooh! . . . First in with the obvious first name suggestion ‘I’
If by “first in” you mean “a year late”, then well done. Kudos.
Whoops. Yeah. I’d forgotten how to count to four when I wrote this post.