How to Change Your Name
By Jayelle Seeley
- Get Engaged
- Go to the court with your fiancé the day before your wedding.
- Fill out the marriage license application.
- Get to the line where you are asked what last name you’d like to take.
- Freeze.
- Say, “I’ve never even written my first name next to yours. I haven’t even said the combination out loud.”
- He says, “You don’t have to take my last name if you don’t want. Or you can hyphenate.”
- “I always planned to change my last name when I got married, so I guess I’ll just take yours.”
- Cry.
- Ask yourself, “What is wrong with me?”
- Fill out the marriage license application.
- Get married.
- Get harassed for the next six months because your voicemail and Facebook still say, “Jayelle Marie Seeley.”
- Change your last name on Facebook.
- Re-record your voicemail so that it just says, “Jayelle.”
- Get harassed for the next six months because your voicemail and Facebook still say, “Jayelle Marie Seeley.”
- Complain to your new husband.
- I’ll have to take an entire day off.
- I’ll have to go to the Social Security office which means driving downtown which I HATE.
- I’ll have to park on the street which I HATE.
- I’ll have to go to the DMV and get a new license which I HATE.
- I’ll have to change my name on everything I own which I will HATE.
- Quit your job, the one you hate.
- Drive downtown.
- Park in the lot.
- Walk toward the building.
- Entrance closed.
- Walk around to the side.
- Sit and wait.
- “Congratulations, Mrs. Johnson.”
- Spend an hour on your makeup before you go to the DMV.
- The man at the door sees you holding an envelope in your left hand which hosts a big sparkly ring.
- “Name change?”
- “How did you know?”
- “Congratulations.”
- Smile demurely, “Thank you.”
- Take the best damn license photo of your entire life.
- The man at the door sees you holding an envelope in your left hand which hosts a big sparkly ring.
- Drive downtown.
- Go to the court with your fiancé the day before your wedding.
- Leave Your Husband.
- Use your middle name as your last name on all your social media.
- Two years later, the divorce decree arrives.
- Don’t read it.
- Too painful.
- Don’t read it.
- Every time you’re asked for your legal last name:
- Say it in a low tone.
- Mumble it like a child who was just forced to apologize.
- Wait another two years.
- Maybe I’ll just change my last name to Marie!
- Maybe I’ll make it Jayelle 2.0!
- Maybe I’ll be Jayelle The Magnificent!
- Maybe I’ll use a last name from a random generator!
- Get a job at a school where all the students need to call you “Ms. Johnson.”
- Lose that job.
- Get accepted into a master’s degree program.
- “He has nothing to do with me earning my master’s. I have to ditch his last name.”
- No other brilliant ideas come your way
- Decide to take back your maiden name.
- Hear all the horror stories about expensive name changes.
- Assume there was nothing in your divorce paperwork that would allow you to resume your prior name.
- Print out a document using online software to change your name with The Supreme Court.
- Fee of $210
- Alerting the papers.
- This seems extreme.
- Call your lawyer friend.
- “Just go down to City Hall with your divorce decree!”
- “I didn’t think the divorce included that.”
- “It’s a standard provision.”
- Finally read your decree.
- “Oh.”
- Drive downtown on a Monday morning.
- Find street parking near City Hall.
- Line up the side mirror with the other car’s side mirror.
- Cut it hard.
- Mirror lines up with bumper.
- Start turning the wheel back.
- Hit the curb.
- “Fuck.”
- Hit the curb.
- Find a different spot.
- Feed the meter for two hours.
- Walk to City Hall.
- “I don’t know if I’m in the right place but I need to change my name because of divorce.”
- “You’re in the wrong place, go to the court.”
- “I don’t know if I’m in the right place but I need to change my name because of divorce.”
- Walk to the Court Building.
- Get through security.
- No one asks where you are going.
- Look blankly at a sign.
- Do a lap around the first floor.
- Climb the staircase to the clerk’s office.
- “You already have it written into your decree. All you have to do is go to the social security office.”
- You could walk to the federal building but you’re sure your parking time will expire before you’re done there.
- Walk back to your car an hour early.
- Park by Café Kubal on Water Street because you remember that was right next to the lot where you parked for the federal building.
- Pay for two hours.
- Remember the entrance is not at the front.
- Walk to the side.
- Entrance closed.
- Follow the signs.
- Go around back.
- Follow more signs.
- Entrance here.
- Look over and notice your parked car.
- Realize that you did a lap around the entire building.
- Look over and notice your parked car.
- Walk to the side.
- Check in with Security.
- “What are you here for?”
- “Social security.”
- “It’s going to be a long wait.”
- “Well, I’m here.”
- Take a number.
- Wonder if you will run out of parking time.
- C435
- “I need your divorce decree.”
- “This is from April?”
- “Yes, April of 2016.”
- “I was being indecisive.”
- “I’ve never been in that situation before so I don’t judge.”
- “Here you are MIZZ Seeley. You’ll get your new card in two weeks.”
- “That’s it?”
- “That’s it!”
- Look down at the receipt
- Jayelle Marie Seeley.
- Notice that it has been over four years since a new piece of paper has been handed to you with that name.
- Feel unexpectedly elated.
- Notice that it has been over four years since a new piece of paper has been handed to you with that name.
- Jayelle Marie Seeley.
- Find street parking near City Hall.
- Realize you have another hour before your parking time expires.
- Every time you pass someone:
- Smile broadly.
- “Good morning!”
- Get a scoop of vanilla raspberry swirl ice cream topped with hot fudge.
- Take off your sandals.
- Roll up your pants.
- Stick your bare feet into the fountain at Clinton Square.
- Kick your feet back and forth with childish glee, splashing water.
- Wait at the DMV for two hours.
- “Sign here.”
- “1 2 3”
- “You look pretty.”
- $12.50
- “That’s it?”
- “That’s it!”
BIO
Jayelle Seeley has called Syracuse, NY, home for the past 8 years. She is currently studying for her master’s degree mental health counseling. This is her first published piece.