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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to be pissed off with this everyday sexism

203 replies

EmJay19 · 27/01/2020 21:21

So my MIL (and other family members) send cards
‘To Mr & Mrs J Bloggs’ for example, even though my initial isn’t J. What’s the sense in this? Wondering if she would do this if she had a daughter.
What are your everyday sexism bugbears?

OP posts:
Wheresthebiffer2 · 27/01/2020 21:24

my MIL sends me a card for my birthday, addressed to Mrs J Blogggs.
I hate it with a passion, but accept it is just a generation thing (she is 78).

AnxietyDream · 27/01/2020 21:29

It's the old fashioned way of addressing, so I imagine she'd also do it with a daughter.

It's horrible, obviously, but not something they've invented for you personally.

RandomUsernameHere · 27/01/2020 21:31

My DC's school does this too, I hate it. I've already left feedback about it, which they ignored.

Wearywithteens · 27/01/2020 21:31

This reply has been withdrawn

This has been withdrawn at the poster's request.

CameFromAway · 27/01/2020 21:32

Drives me frigging mental

NaviSprite · 27/01/2020 21:33

I think it’s more about how they learnt to write and address letters and whilst it may have a misogynistic basis it’s not really a thought out act of misogyny by most people of that generation tbh.

I personally get annoyed that my FIL comes to visit every Saturday and when he and DH go outside for him to smoke (FIL that is) he always states “time for boys club, no women or girls allowed” as a bad attempt at humour - he directs it at me and DD and then adds that DS can join them when he’s older. I bite my tongue because I know he’s not actually trying to ban me from going outside, but it winds me up no end!

nocoolnamesleft · 27/01/2020 21:34

My septuagenarian mother certainly thinks it's incredibly old fashioned and sexist. Still, she was young in the 60s...

PearlsPerils · 27/01/2020 21:44

My septuagenarian mother certainly thinks it's incredibly old fashioned and sexist. Still, she was young in the 60s...

Exactly, mine too. She would never call me or anyone else ‘Mrs DH name’, and was firmly a Ms when she got divorced. There aren’t many people left for whom being older is an excuse for this type of thing.

Brokenlightfitting · 27/01/2020 21:44

That is the correct etiquette, they are being polite.

PearlsPerils · 27/01/2020 21:47

That is the correct etiquette

According to whom?
It’s not polite to call people things they don’t want to be called!

cardibach · 27/01/2020 21:48

I don’t know about that Pearls. I’m 55 and it’s the way I was taught. I can’t get too worked up about it either to be honest.

Eemamc · 27/01/2020 21:50

My mother used to do this when sending things to us, until I had a word, she’s stopped now, but lots of older family members still do this and it really annoys me. My husband knows this so sometimes adds his initial onto cards addressed to us as a little joke

Thingsthatgo · 27/01/2020 21:51

My MIL does this. Drives me potty. My mum wouldn’t dream of doing it now, despite having learnt it in the 50s.

newbingepisodes · 27/01/2020 21:52

Yep my MIL makes a point of addressing things to Mr and Mrs x married surname. Even though I'm Dr maiden name!

FriedasCarLoad · 27/01/2020 21:52

It's how I was taught and I'm still in my thirties (just Grin). I try to remember not to do people whom I know dislike it, but I'm sure I sometimes just automatically revert to habit.

isabellerossignol · 27/01/2020 21:55

I was always taught that this was the polite way to address things, and I'm only 44.

It always pissed me off being known as Mrs Someone else's initial, but I was always told not to be silly because it was a sign of respect.

Now I know that other people feel the same, I imagine it will die out. But I can't get worked up about older people doing it because it's very hard to undo a lifetime of being told that something is the correct way of doing things. I would be Hmm if a twenty something was doing it though as I'd imagine it's done deliberately to irritate.

BackforGood · 27/01/2020 21:55

it’s old fashioned formal writing by old fashioned formal woman who grew up in the 50s.

You are decades out. We didn't leave school until the 80s and that was absolutely the correct way to address a card / letter / invitation to a couple.
I suspect it only changed as e-mail came in and a lot of formal letter writing went out of fashion.

However, in terms of what’s happening in terms of inequality generally, and - more shockingly to my mind - the way that marketing has become so "pink" and "blue" in the last 15 years or so, this is really not a big deal.

isabellerossignol · 27/01/2020 21:56

I was still doing it myself a couple of years ago because I thought it was rude not to. Even though I didn't like it myself. It's hard to overcome social conditioning.

PearlsPerils · 27/01/2020 21:57

So many people here saying that’s how they were taught it.
By whom, I wonder? I certainly don’t remember being taught it at school.

SyntheticPumpkin · 27/01/2020 21:59

Related to this, why is it always “Mr & Mrs” anyway, not “Mrs & Mr”?

isabellerossignol · 27/01/2020 21:59

So many people here saying that’s how they were taught it.
By whom, I wonder? I certainly don’t remember being taught it at school.

At school and by my parents.

I was also taught at school to indent each line when writing an address. People don't generally do that any more and I imagine this will die out in the same way.

Hearhoovesthinkzebras · 27/01/2020 21:59

That is the formal way of addressing letters though isn't it?

DappledThings · 27/01/2020 22:00

I'm 40 and I do this. Mr and Mrs J Bloggs, but not Mrs J Bloggs on her own. Would do Mrs E Bloggs for that.

Only if the person has definitely had changed her own name. Otherwise would be Mr J Bloggs and Ms E Wilson. Never just Joe and Emma on an envelope though, I like the formality.

Hearhoovesthinkzebras · 27/01/2020 22:03

What is the correct way of addressing an envelope to a married couple then?

I was always taught in school.that it's

Mr and Mrs Initial Surname

But should it be

Mr Initial Surname and Mrs Initial Surname

EmJay19 · 27/01/2020 22:06

Wow I’m surprised how many people think this is ok. I understand, to some extent, it’s a generation thing and is not done with any malice but seriously it’s not my name 😭. Not suggesting I need to have a go at anyone who does this but wouldn’t have thought its acceptable to be a bit pissed off with it

@Wheresthebiffer2 you win! That’s sooo annoying!

OP posts: