Somewhere between London and here, the rest of C.'s paperwork is winging its way across the ocean to me. I've been nervous about applying for my UK visa for months (what if I'm turned down?), but this week, the ongoing disturbance of rearranging the household yet again for painting and repairs is temporarily trumping my visa fretfulness.
At least the odds are against FexEx/UPS/whatever-service-he-used losing his passport entirely the way FedEx did my sister's, once upon a time.
At least the odds are against FexEx/UPS/whatever-service-he-used losing his passport entirely the way FedEx did my sister's, once upon a time.
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I feel more justified than usual in fretting over things this year, since most of the things I'm fretting about are Major Lifechanging Events.
Thank you for your reassurance.
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(I don't think of Canada or the UK - or even Italy - as not being home. It's just that the U.S. is still even more so. And Iowa is my home even more than that, but no one ever welcomes me back to there in particular.)
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I once accidentally wrote Canada in that box by mistake - it was a land border and I was stressed. The guy processing grilled me on loads of stuff (because my work permit was about to run out) and then didn't notice this and stamped it. I noticed it later on and crossed it out and corrected it. I was then really worried the next time I went down to the US because I thought they'd get me for committing some sort of wrong-doing. They didn't say anything but on the way back I surrendered that one early!
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By the way, the upside of FedEx losing your passport is that I learned you can get BOTH a new US passport AND an Italian student visa in just one day. Not sure if they have an unpublished policy on emergencies such as that or if it was just my tearfulness that got the job done. It certainly changed my thinking that all immigration officials were heartless.
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I'd forgotten how phenomenally organized and responsive both governmental entities were to your fiasco! Still, lest anyone reading this get their expectations up: apply for your first passport/renew your passport at least six weeks before it expires. They're not usually that fast.
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I post on a board for American expatriates in the UK, and I've never seen anyone outright denied a spousal visa; there have been delays with requests for clarification or additional paperwork, but never an outright refusal.
(I'm here by way of
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I'm heartened to hear that delays are more likely than denials. Delays are no problem - that's part of why I'm applying a good two months before I would particularly like to be over there.
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We're hoping for a interoffice transfer, ourselves.
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Good luck with a smooth interoffice transfer!
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