NIKI,
could you please tell me how you went about telling the people that know you as the name you disliked
I told those closest to me beforehand (dad, cousin, few friends). Well, my dad is a special case, I'll skip him. My cousin grew up with a lot of my abusers around; some of those were also her abusers, and some of hers were mine. Meaning: she totally got it and supported it. Friends: Most curious, asking why and how, then accepted it no problem. One worried very much about using my old name unintentionally but I told him that's okay and no problem and that I understood that it may take some time to adjust to. We agreed that he did not have to worry if it happened (he's a perfectionist and HATES doing the "wrong thing") and I would just go by my new name. One good friend of mine surprised me (did not expect this from her!): She said, "Oh, you're changing your name, no problem. As long as you don't tell me you're a lesbian all of a sudden." I didn't tell her that. ;)
When it was clear the name change would go through I told my godson's parents. His mom used to be a good friend of mine, but his dad has also always been abusive and I don't like him and have lost her to him, so to speak. So, the only reason I told them was my godson. I told them and they didn't believe them. I had to show them my new ID card. I did this only in order to be able to stay in touch with my godchild who was 13 then. If it hadn't been for him, I would have got up and left. I was so angry. Showed them the ID card which had them "resign", "declare defeat", so to speak, of my craziness. I left it at that. I told them one of the reasons why (abusive ex-husband, who is also the godfather of their son), another thing they dismissed as me being crazy. Trying to say that I haven't seen them since. Thank goodness my godson has been old enough to meet with me in the city when I come visit.
I was forced to inform my aunts (my mother's sisters) because of a mutual inheritance (so much about data protection). I handed the new name and address and documents in to the court who happily passed it on to them. Oh well. One aunt accepted it and switched to using my new name, the other tried to send me on the guilt trip, didn't work, end of story.
I told another friend of mine, someone who was a very good friend before I moved here. I haven't heard from him since (weeks now) and don't expect to. He's a Christian and about 50% of the Christians I've told (friends) could not understand it, not relate, and not accept it, and partly put their blinders on and pretended I'd never said a thing, calling me by my old name. I decided at a certain point that I would not accept that any longer and since then, there has been no contact (I gave it some weeks adjustment time, but that didn't change a thing).
I told Canadian friends who have been gone from my life since then. Those are people I had been friends with from age 16.
As for work:
I had taken on a new job before I moved, still with my old name. Then came here to my new city and handed it the certificate of the name change which had the boss call me into the office (before my first day) to "talk about things". I went (talk about anxious) and got it over with. Once he had had that talk with me (he had said nothing about the name change in it, but yes, that's why he called me in, a colleague was a good friend of mine and told me), he was fine and happily changed his files (my friend told me he was singing while doing it on his computer, lol).
Job search: People always seemed very curious (partly nosy) and asked every single time. After a few interviews I thought I'd understood that that was about them being scared of getting into a) danger and b) staff trouble with me depending on my background. My general reaction from then on was: "I have changed my names for solely personal reasons which do not have anything to do with me being in any danger nor being under pressure for anything." (I had gotten the two same cards on the table from almost all of them: a) Are you running from someone/something? b) Does your name change have any implications for your work here? (Really asking: Are we getting into trouble/Will we lose you again soon/Etc.?)
They also tried other questions (like trying to enter the house through the back door (German idiom, sorry, no clue if you understand)), but I just sounded like a broken record repeating what I had said already. I did find a job! :)
My top 5:
Are you running from someone/something?
Why are you doing it?
Yea, yea. (Brushing it off, not wanting to know anything further because the topic was uncomfortable to them. But accepting and respecting it nonetheless.)
-- (Silence)
I've been thinking about that myself... Followed by loads of in-depth questions.
I also made beautiful little cards and put my new name and my new address on the front, and this quote in the back:
"Follow your passion. Stay true to yourself. Never follow someone else's path unless you're in the woods and you're lost and you see a path. By all means, you should follow that." - Ellen DeGeneres
I celebrated with myself and some red wine. :)
NIKI, there's one thing I'd like to stress: I think if one is not 100% (not one percent less) convinced to do this, one shouldn't do it. Because you can never know how people will react. I had people leave me standing there and I've never heard from them since who I would have never thought would react this way ever. Really very close people, until then, who I'd known for a long time and very well and vice versa. So, make sure that this is what you want for you and you alone, and make sure to think thoroughly about what price you are willing to pay for it.
I can only agree with Hashi: So worth it.