Monday, November 3, 2008
One Step Closer...
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Adjustment of Status to Permanent Legal Resident
- Cover letter listing contents for - Immediate Relative (Spouse) Family Based Adjustment of Status Application. List the major contents of the package (i.e. I-485 and evidence, I-765, I-131,etc).
- - G-325a – For DAN
- - I-765 – EAD application
- Application
- Copy of passport
- Copy of Visa
- 2 passport photos
- On back: Name & Alien Receipt Number
- Mail to:
- USCIS
- P.O. Box 805887
- Chicago, IL 60680-4120
- I-485 – Application to Register/AOS
- Mail to:
- USCIS
- P.O. Box 805887
- Chicago, IL 60680-4120
- Copy of birth certificate
- Copy of passport with visa page
- 2 Passport photos
- Vaccination supplement i-693a
- G-325a
- Copy of NOA2- I129f Approval
- Copy of Marriage Certificate
- Copy of Form I-94
- Check or money order for $1010 – payable to U.S. Dept. of Homeland Security
- I-864 – For EMILY
- Most recent tax return & W-2
- Copy of passport
- I -864 – For KAREN
- Most recent tax return & W-2
- Copy of passport
Tuesday, July 29, 2008
Thursday, July 17, 2008
Things to Do in Boston Next Week
- Add my name to the lease for proof of RESIDENCY (Asap)
- Sort out health INSURANCE add to Emily's account, or get a separate one. (Asap)
- Start contacting people about JOBS: (Godine & Sedo done), direct e-mails for: Beacon, Boston Magazine, Liz's company, Crimson Life Sciences, Club Passim, Perseus, Shift Comms, German School, Blink Music & others (Asap)
- Get an affordable civil ceremony RING (In the first week)
- Apply for marriage license: go to City Clerk's office. Bring ID (passport, birth certificate), and cash (I think $25 if we file in Cambridge). (Asap, by 4th Aug. at latest)
- Take a look at the AOS Adjustment paperwork and get applications together (In the first week)
- Get a Social Security Number (SSN) (After 2 weeks)
- Open a bank ACCOUNT and a joint account (After getting an SSN) DONE
Hopefully most of that can be sorted out before 08.08.08, so that there is less to do then. And I will have a job, I hope! Zaz.
Updated 7/26/08
Monday, July 14, 2008
Movies to see
- BATMAN - out July 18
- X-FILES - out July 25
- Indiana Jones - still playing here
- Iron Man - may still be playing (Did you see this one? I forget.)
- Wall-e
Wednesday, July 9, 2008
Tuesday, July 8, 2008
To-Do upon Dan's arrival.
- ASAP, but a minimum of 4 days before the civil ceremony: apply for marriage license. Go to City Clerk's office. Bring ID (passport, birth certificate), and cash (I think $25 if we file in Cambridge).
- ASAP, but no more than two weeks after Dan arrives (wait for him to be entered in the system): Apply for Social Security Number. Bring passport, birth certificate, all visa documents, and application form.
- ASAP: File for AOS and EAD. Much more on this later.
Sunday, July 6, 2008
Wedding Planning - Dispatch No. 4
- Marriage Counseling with Pastor Joe (3 hours)
- Meet with cake decorator Carolyn (about 1 hour)
- taste, decide on flavors and design
- Meet with coordinator/florist Doug (about 1 hour)
- confirm colors, talk about specific flowers
- Dress fitting in Owensboro (about 3 hours, with driving time)
- Meet with chef Doug to set menu for Rehearsal Dinner (1 hour)
- Meet with chef Scott Schymik and Coordinator Andrea at Kirby's to set reception menu (1 hour)
- Meet with photographer Lvonne (probably upwards of 1 hour)
- she may want to do some photos of us, but mostly she'll want to get to know us and talk about our style
Friday, July 4, 2008
Photos a Day
Thursday, July 3, 2008
Wedding Planning - Dispatch No. 3
- Invitations: design and make
- Invitation, Reception Card, Driving Directions, Hotel information card, Registry card, Rehearsal dinner invitation, Reply card, Reply card envelope, Cocktail party invitation (night before)
- Place cards & Table numbers/names
- Menu cards
- Ceremony Programs
- Weekend itinerary card, directions and city information for welcome bags
- Schedule for wedding party
- Napkin rings
- Thank you cards - design our own?
- Cards for pastor, parents & attendants
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
Photo Flashback, 2006
Now that my digital camera is working again, here are some lost-in-the-aether photos from Herm and from Coventry 2006.
Silly sunglasses ahoy.
Back in Guernsey: Doing Things
- Mailing things: books, jackets, jumpers, clothes
- Kündigen insurance stuff (automatic via Helios)
- Went to St. Oberholz
- Eaten falafel on Oranienstr
- Paid pre-requisite excess baggage to QUEasyjet
- Find out temp. possibilities (contacted: OSA, Leapfrog, Dreamjobs, Situations, Firstcall): This needs my housing license/rights to work--DONE WITH OSA/SOURCE
- Compare costs of shipping vs. checking extra bags
- Go through things and pack stuff to bring to U.S.
- Buy a new large checked bag. £20 at sports shop. From £50 at Creaseys
- Set aside things to ship to U.S. - Books? Subwoofer? Clothes? Other things
- Work out whether I get tax rebates--FILE FORM & WAIT FOREVER - needs all income details from Accent/RBC in order to
- Sort out bank accounts (close Lloyds)--DONE & TRSFR TO HSBC
- Have a nice dinner with families
- Hang out with the boys
- Get a haircut--DONE 7.7.08
- Get an external hard drive
- Walk and play with the Bully--DONE FAIRLY OFTEN
- Make sure paperwork is all together
- Develop photos (or in Boston?)--DO IN BOS - nowhere develops Ilford HP5
- Take photos of Guernsey and people there
- Sort out clothes to keep and clothes to get rid of
- Look for rings? Size R or 83/4
- Check in online from 21/7/08, 13:40
Sunday, June 22, 2008
Dan to do: One week and one day to departure from Berlin
In Berlin
- Sort out mailing things: books, jackets
- Kündigen insurance stuff
- Go to St. Oberholz
- Superficially clean room
- Spend a day wandering around favorite places (Emily's suggestion)
- Eat falafel at Hackescher Markt
- Compare costs of shipping vs. checking extra bags
- Have a nice dinner with mum (at least once)
- Hang out with the boys
- Go through things in room and pack things to bring to U.S. (1 big bag and one guitar)
- Also pack or set aside things to ship to U.S.
- Develop photos
- Take photos of Guernsey and people there
- Sort out bank accounts (close one account/transfer money)
- Sort out clothes to keep and clothes to get rid of
- Consider making money
- Get a haircut
- Walk and play with the Bully
- Think about what to do with guitars
- Make sure paperwork is all together
Impending arrival
So, countdowns:
- four weeks from Tuesday: Dan gets here late at night
- sixish weeks: Uncle Sam wedding
- fourteenish weeks: my General Exams
- roughly October: Dan receives Advance Parole and 12 month Employment Authorization
- 189 days from now: the Wedding
- 171 days from now: our fourth anniversary
Oh, and we have a church, reception site & caterer, florist, photographer, cake baker, and venue & caterer for the rehearsal dinner all booked. And I bought a dress!
Monday, June 16, 2008
Woohoooo!
Saturday, June 7, 2008
Wedding Planning - Dispatch No. 2
This is the ballroom. You see the side walls are exposed brick with windows in - they're actually the external walls of the houses on either side. pretty cool. in the upper right of this photo is the dance floor. You see a big mirror at the top middle of the picture? That's where they usually set up the cake.
This is a big mirror in the side room where our bar would be, showing the main staircase of the house. This is a great spot for photos and will be a good deal quieter than the ballroom during the reception. On the website, you can see menus by clicking on the bottom left picture at the center of the page.
We also stopped at Le Merigot hotel this afternoon to look at their rooms and just see what it looks like. This is the lobby and Blush restaurant and bar ("ultralounge"). It's pretty cool. If people are staying at this hotel, it could be good to go here for the quasi bachelor party.
The next picture is in the bedroom of the presidential suite, looking into the living room. It's crazy. About 2,000 square feet. The master bathroom in this suite has a sauna in it.
The next photo is one of their "three-way" suites. This is the one where Obama stayed a couple weeks ago. This picture is also taken from the bedroom looking into the living room. This suite has one king sized bed (2 people), but they could bring in a couple cots so that the suite would sleep 4. If they did that, it would work out to less than a hundred dollars per person per night. There is also an adjoining standard room (sleeps 4), so that the two rooms could be connected and 8 people could split the $500 price tag. Not too shabby. Anyway, it was crazy beautiful and not badly priced.
For the rehearsal dinner (dinner party with family and wedding party), we're thinking of going to Just Rennie's. It's a beautiful, small private restaurant with a fabulous chef. He'll work with us to come up with an individual menu, but he also has menus on his website (.pdf). Really nice guy and lovely space.
The florist/coordinator we're looking at is Doug at the Olde Salt Box. He used to run a flower shop across the street from my high school. I used to go in and buy myself flowers from him all the time. He's fabulous.
The photographer we're probably going to go with is Lvonne Bennett. Her website is really cheesy and outdated and the sample photos aren't as good as what we saw when we met her. The good thing is she doesn't cost $8,200, unlike one other guy we met with. She's not the cheapest, but she's also not overly expensive and she's really good to work with.
I think those are all the major decisions so far. Let me know if you have any thoughts. I love you.
Wednesday, June 4, 2008
Wedding Planning - Dispatch No. 1
I visited two churches today - Trinity Methodist and Central Methodist (my home church). I think it'll be best (money-wise and comfort-wise) to stick with Central, as it's a known quantity. We know the people involved and Rev. Easley is totally scriptable. He said that we can incorporate whatever we want and change the wording of the traditional service if we want. I'll get you a copy of the service as quickly as I can. Anyway, here are pictures of the church:
There will be Christmas decorations up - garland around the altar rail and wreaths up on the balcony. There will also be candleabras on the pews and candles in the windows (lots of candles). Other decoration is negotiable.
The other thing we looked at this morning was The Old Courthouse Wedgwood Ballroom. It is GORGEOUS. Here are pictures.
This venue is probably the most complicated option - we would have to set up rentals for all the dishes and everything as well as contracting a caterer (which is easy... we have a good caterer in mind who is free that day and has worked in this space lots of times). BUT I LOVE it. It's got like... twenty foot ceilings and it's four rooms in total - there's a double foyer area (with a place to hang coats), and a little crescent shaped room in a bay window. there's gorgeous wood and marble work. BEAUTIFUL.
I'll keep you posted on further developments. We're going to have Chinese food and talk about the option of having a Chinese Rehearsal Dinner (Do you like that idea? It's Jimmy's - that good Chinese place - I think you liked it).
This afternoon we're going to meet with Vicker Photography, and to look at Haub's Steakhouse as another option for the rehearsal dinner.
Tuesday, June 3, 2008
Visa Visa Visa Visa!
1. Get Dan a ticket home.
2. Get Dan a ticket to the states.
3. Get married.
Monday, June 2, 2008
Show Time
I am on my way home to make the first of (probably) a series of wedding planning trips. I have appointments with various officiants, reception sites, caterers, florists, cake bakers, photographers and dress shops. I'm still feeling superstitious, so I'm not making any official decisions or plans until I get the high sign from Dan that all has gone well, but I am getting really excited for all the planning. Updates forthcoming....
Sunday, May 25, 2008
Final Pre-Interview To Do
- DONE: Get a final vaccination from the far-away doctors' office (varicella: medicine costs €56; previous vaccine medications cost €65 total. Doctor costs €50. In cash. Damn you health insurance.)
- Have proof of vaccinations sent to Dr. Erbenich's office at the Krankenhaus Waldfriede. Only then can they process and fax my results to the Frankfurt US Consulate. This can be a copy of the Impfpass (cost - yes, there's a cost - €3) faxed to their office with my case number etc. [Need to phone to check this.]
- Pay for the interview online (cost €86,09) and get an electronic receipt (wichtig)
- Get copies of the NOA2 and fiancee letter of intent
- Copy police reports, passport ID page and check whether other copies are needed.
- Check all interview documents and ensure they're marked and copied sufficiently.
- Get info on Frankfurt (getting to/from places etc.)
Meanwhile feign interest in work and try to do these things whilst working 9 - 6.
Saturday, May 17, 2008
Friday, May 16, 2008
Updatables
Last steps:
A medical at the hospital in Berlin-Zehlendorf at 10.30 am on Tuesday 20th May (1 morning off work!)
- For this I need 1, or 3, passport photos (depending on the source), my passport, my case number and my vaccine records.
- When I leave the venerable Dr. Lothar Erbenich, I need to take with me a DS-3025 form (vaccine follow-up on adjusting status) and my chest X-ray (which goes on the plane with me
Approximately a week later I will finally, actually, tangibly have a K-1 visa delivered to my very door. Or at least to my postbox.
Thursday, May 15, 2008
Sunday, May 4, 2008
Wedding Plans getting off the ground
Tentative Decisions:
- Pending the approval of a few very important guests, we're looking at a Christmastime wedding (for the ease of our traveling guests who need to book time off, as well as for the bride herself, who can't easily get time off during the fall semester and would be hard pressed to find time to plan in the summer).
- We're looking at having an early ceremony (noontime) and champagne and cake reception directly following, then a very intimate dinner later on.
- As for the ceremony, we want to work within the basic "traditional" structure of the wedding, but to really personalize the readings and music to reflect our interests and beliefs.
- We want to try to incorporate some Irish elements (maybe some traditional Irish vows or readings - I already have an Irish hanky to carry down the aisle with me) into the ceremony.
- We're looking for a reading in German, to be read by a German, in addition to another literary passage in English.
- Trying to start thinking about music to incorporate: I've got very definite ideas of the kind of music I'd like to involve - Bach for processing, maybe some Beethoven (Pathetique) or Chopin (a Nocture), and, for Dan (and because I like it), "Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence."
Saturday, May 3, 2008
Domestic Fantasies: Plants
Thursday, May 1, 2008
Progress!
Sunday, April 27, 2008
Developments
- Emily: finally complete and send I-134, documentary evidence, etc. (by Monday)
- Dan: fill out and send DS-230 I, DS-156, DS-156k, DS-157
- fill out and return Document Checklist - Request Interview
- receive appointment and go to interview, go to medical exam
- quit job, visit mother, come to Amurka already
Monday, April 21, 2008
News news news...
Other big life decisions are perking along. The apartment hunt is in full swing and we're talking a lot about wedding stuff. I expect this will continue as my parents are in town this week.
My (and my parents') I-134 package will be on their way to Germany by the end of this week at the latest.
It's all coming together!
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Things to do - stolen from visajourney.com
- A copy of the entire I-129f package (that you made when you sent the petition in) and a copy of information that you sent back due to an RFE (if you received one).
- Send all originals of the documentary proof that you submitted for the I-129F to your fiance(e) for their interview at the embassy.
- Send an original letter affirming your desire to marry your fiance(e) and your continued support of the K-1 Visa. Sign and date the form. This will be similar to the letter you provided with the I-129F, but dated much closer to the interview (it will have most likely been several months since you submitted your I-129F).
- I-134 Affidavit of Support form. Ensure it is notarized (by a US Notary Public), with all required supporting evidence. Begin collecting the required information ahead of time, as it can often take several weeks to collect it all.
- You will likely need at a minimum (for the above form) two to three of your most recent pay stubs and a signed letter from your employer listing you job title, start date, your salary, and the status (full-time) of your position. Begin collecting these ASAP after your NOA2 arrives. You will also probably want to include other evidence such as your banking information and other assets as required by the I-134. Specifically you will need at least 2 of the 4 options mentioned in Section II-Supporting Evidence of the I-134. See this FAQ for more tips and ueful information on the Affidavit of Support Form.
- A copy of the NOA2 that you received in the mail.
- Proof of your ongoing relationship. This needs to be taken to the interview! Include photos, travel documents, emails, etc from between the time you filed and present (NOA1 date-now).
- Examples: Copies of phone bills, cell phone bills, emails (you can edit personal info with a marker), letters (edit personal info also), stamps on the letters (to document the date they were sent), and other written documentary proof. Provide a reasonable amount; two to four of each type. Pick a range of dates up to and including the present. You can also include a copy of engagement ring receipt (this is something that is a big optional - do not worry if you do not have a ring yet!)
Packet 3 - sent to Dan from Consulate includes:
- Cover letter with case number
- Form DSL-1076: visa instructions for fiance(e) nonimmigrant visa applicants (checklist)
- Form DS 156 - generic nonimmigrant visa application form
- Form DS 157 - supplemental nonimmigrant visa application form
- Form DS 156k - fiance visa application form
- Form DS 230 part 1 - application for immigrant visa and alien registration
- Information regarding the medical examination: Medical Examination Information with list of panel physicians in Germany and Vaccination Requirements chart
- Form OF 167 (Evidence which may be presented to meet the public charge provisions of the law) -- not sure what this is... have to do more research.
After Packet 3, Dan sends the following back to the consulate:
- a photocopy of each page of your passport
- one passport style picture (attached to Form DS 156)
- Form DSL-1076: visa instructions for fiance(e) nonimmigrant visa applicants (checklist)
- Form DS 230 part 1
- Form DS 156 (needs one passport photo attached)
- Form DS 157
- Form DS 156k (the checklist says to return this one as well – however it needs to be signed in front of a consular officer)
- Form DS 156k (the checklist says to return this one as well – however it needs to be signed in front of a consular officer)
- Your Passport (must have at least 6 months validity beyond the issuance date of the visa) (Pls note: if yours is to expire soon – apply for a new one well ahead. Currently it takes 4 – 6 weeks to obtain a new one. Cost: €26, you’ll need 1 passport picture German style)
- Your birth certificate or a certified copy (maybe also get extra certified copies?)
- Police Certificate (each applicant aged 16 yrs or over is required to submit a police certificate from the police authorities of each locality of the country of the applicant’s nationality or current residence where the applicant has resided for at least twelve months since attaining the age of sixteen) (Pls note: it currently takes 1 - 2 weeks to get this for Germany; it costs € 13)
- Photographs (as described in packet 3)
- Evidence of Support (as per Form OF 167 or I 134)
- Evidence of Relationship (e.g. letters, photographs or other evidence of your engagement)
- € 4,25 in stamps (envelope to be self-addressed will be provided) - you'll want to double check the required postage
- You also need a passport photo for your medical exam
- And you need your vaccination record from your doctor in Guernsey (probably should get a copy of all your records)
Just to give you an idea of how the next few weeks might go. We should start moving very quickly on these things! So exciting!
I129F Approval!
Though it's not the visa in hand, this is most of the waiting done and is thus pretty amazing. It hasn't quite sunk in, so any more precise descriptions of how amazing are difficult to come up with.
This basically means that I have approval to attend an interview at the consulate in Frankfurt, the time of which they will determine after I have 'informed' them that I have all the information required. Though it will mean legal negotiating to get police reports (polizeiliche Führungszeugnisse, anyone?) in Germany, that's pretty small beans all in all; it also seems to take only a few weeks on average between requesting the interview and receiving a date, which means (I really hope) less than a month to attend the interview. If approved, the visa comes back in my passport a few days later.
Now as long as they give me the visa in Frankfurt. If I avoid the phrase "damn Yankees" and keep all my documents I think I'll be fine. Meanwhile, I have to get busy with police reports, changing my address with USCIS and doubtless other things I've forgotten.
Mental air-punch.
Monday, April 7, 2008
Still waiting...
K-1 Visas, I-129f filed in Vermont, Beneficiary from UK, filed between 01-01-2008 and 02-08-2008:
22 total pending files - 15 with NOA2
K-1 Visas, I-129f filed in Vermont, Beneficiary from anywhere, filed between 01-01-2008 and 02-08-2008:
100 total pending files - 67 with NOA2, 2 with final visa approval
All numbers are according to visajourney.com, which has a tiny sample size, but is relatively helpful nonetheless. It at least has a placebo effect. VJ says our I-129f should be adjudicated by May 14, or we should start bothering them. That's not soooo far off now.
On that lovely website, I found another couple very like us. Filed only a few days before us in Vermont, beneficiary (man) is from the UK, but is living in Germany. Their I-129f has been approved and their case has already arrived in Frankfurt at the consulate. This is a little jealous-making, though I am happy for them. *sigh* I suppose our time will come.
Not that I'm obsessing or anything.
Saturday, April 5, 2008
More waiting
Nothing has changed in about two weeks, as far as I can tell. This is very disappointing, since it looked like everything was going so quickly, and I'm really REALLY hoping that we'll hear something soon. Meanwhile I'm beginning to be nervous about the other parts of the process, but I guess that's a pointless worry until we hear something either way from the Vermont Service Center.
Our fantastic visit last week, though, did help. I just hope that we have an approval before we have to schedule another visit! I'd rather save up that money and use it for better things, like an apartment or wedding or honeymoon.
On the wedding front: we're discussing possible venues and talking about whether to have the big event in Evansville or Boston. Cost and familiarity would suggest Evansville would be the best choice, but Boston is where we've had a shared life. But vital members of my family may not be able to travel to Boston... so many things to think about.
Friday, March 28, 2008
Still in Berlin...
Sunday, March 23, 2008
Status Update
44 Days and counting.
Friday, March 21, 2008
Leaving on a jet plane
Thursday, March 20, 2008
Birthday 2008: Where is my mind? Glory Bound.
I don’t believe in perfect moments, but the occasional imperfect convergences are as close as life gets.
Birthdays have—with little exception—been rather non-eventful, but that has been fine by me. The tendency to build up events in one’s head for them to not meet expectations is potentially dangerous.
Today I turned 24, and—as nonsensical as it is—maybe that added to the way everything fitted together. As though, even in my internal world where the only absolute is that there are no absolutes, I was somehow certain that any doubts I might have about what I was doing, what I had done, and what I will be doing in the future vanished in the synthesis of several things.
Making it home, I walked down Norweger Straße, which here runs the course of the old Wall, for the first time since daylight savings began it was still light as I reached the house.
Leaving the S-Bahn my ears were accompanied by Marty singing Glory Bound which, as I got onto Norweger Straße, changed into The Pixies’ Where Is My Mind? At once it combined both the beginning of our relationship, as well as the present.
And the songs made me smile in spite of work being mundane, and that I felt more certain about things than before made me smile in spite of all the things I have left to do here, and that it was still light reminded me that you will soon be here, and that we may even have half of our process done by the time that you leave.
I can settle for imperfect convergences.
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Status Update
We were last "touched" on 3 March 2008.
39 Days and counting.
Fungus on the Mill River
growing on a dead tree. It doesn't seem quite fitting.
The Laetiporus sulphureus is also called the "chicken of the woods," as it is apparently edible and very common. It grows on dead and decaying wood, in the summer and fall, usually. It also apparently has a strong, fungusy smell and a pleasant sourish taste. It doesn't quite work as an analogy, you see.
Also, for the record, this site is very useful for identifying fungi. This one, too.
Tuesday, January 15, 2008
K-1 To Do
Gray = done
- Need to write a check: Payment as required by USCIS. Use a personal check so you can track the payment.
- Need to write: Cover Letter. Should include a description of what you are petitioning for (I-129F), a table of contents (list everything in the packet). Make sure to sign and date the cover sheet.
- DONE: Form I-129F: Petition for Alien Fiance.
- Need to write: Declaration of how you met in person in the last two years. This should be a single typed page attachment regarding question 18 of the I-129F.
- Need to write: Original statements (from both the US Citizen and foreign fiance) certifying an intent to marry within 90 days of entering the US on a valid K-1.
- Need to gather and organize: Proof of having met in past two years.
- Copies of all airline boarding passes, train passes, itineraries, hotel receipts, passport stamps (make sure you can read the dates on the stamps), and other documentary evidence that you have met within the last two years. You may want to highlight or place post-it notes indicating the dates and locations on the copies (to make the adjudication easier) for the person reviewing your file.
- Do you have your flight itineraries or booking confirmations online? Send them to me?
- Also please scan/photocopy and send me all relevant pages of your passport.
- I can organize these: Color Photos of you and your fiance together. Make sure you write your names, date, and location on the back of every photo. Provide two to five photos. If you only have a single copy of the photo, then make a color copy and send that. If it is a digital photo, have it printed at a company such as kodakgallery.com. You can also make duplicates of photos at your local photo store (Walgreeens, CVS, etc). Place photos in a plastic bag or photo sheet and label the sheet. Note that you may not receive originals of photos back.
- The following items will not typically show proof of having met in the last two years however will show proof of an ongoing relationship: Copies of phone bills, cell phone bills, emails (you can edit personal info with a marker), letters (edit personal info also), stamps on the letters (to document the date they were sent), and other written documentary proof. Provide a reasonable amount; two to four of each type. Pick a range of dates up to and including the present. You can also include a copy of engagement ring receipt
- Should select some emails to send. Also do you have any of my letters with postmarks? I think I have a couple of yours.
- Also, I have the original engagement ring receipt. (Cleverly,) I had them put both of our names on it.
- DONE: G-325A (all four pages) filled out by the US Citizen signed and dated.
- Have to have one taken: One passport-type photo of the US Citizen.
- Need to figure this out: G-325A (all four pages) filled out by the foreign fiance(e) signed and dated.
- DONE: One passport-type photo of the foreign fiance(e).
- Still waiting for my mom to send me this: Copy of the Birth certificate (front and back) for the US Citizen or a copy of ALL pages of the US Citizen's passport issued with a validity of at least 5 years or a copy of the US Citizen's naturalization certificate (front and back). This is used to establish citizenship.
Monday, January 14, 2008
14 January 2008: Snow Day photo EXTRAVAGANZA
Thayer in the snow.
The snow was that really sticky kind that coated the trees. When I stood under the tree, there was this weird light. It felt almost like being in a lighted tent. Shaded, but somehow emitting or reflecting a weird light. Beautiful.
Flowers and snow.
2008
New Year's Resolutions:
◊ Be healthier & happier. The behemoth of unhealth starts creeping up around about now. I feel. I have to ensnare the behemoth of happiness with some kind of bush trap involving Gummi Bears.
◊ Family & friends. Visit when I can, & keep in touch when I can’t. Since they are strewn across the face of the Earth.