I have no doubt somewhere in all of these postings someone has presented a circumstance at least similar to mine, but after spending a week plus reading through them those that I that I¡¯ve read all seem to have a significant variation. I will try to give the relevant facts without being long winded. The basic bank ground is that I met my wife Li ping on line August 8th 2007; It didn¡¯t take long at all to know in my heart that she was who I wanted to spend the rest of my life with. I made my first visit to Zhanjiang China on November 23rd, 2007 accompanied by my 13 year old son. More or less the intention was for us to get married, which we did on November 26th 2007. I stayed with her in Zhanjiang for 10 of the happiest days of my life. Of course when I returned home and filed the visa application K-1/K-3 December 31st, 2007. I have been married twice before, the first time at age 18 and it lasted for about 10 to 11 years, 2 children now fully grown. The 2nd marriage lasted for 13 or 14 years, it was a terrible marriage tainted by numerous extra marital affairs, financial irresponsibility, excessive drinking and some drugs. I adopted her 2 children from previous unmarried relationships, now also grown and we also had 1 son together, now 14. We divorced in late 2006. In both divorce cases I received the custody of the children. If it matters my wife turned 38 in April 2008 and I turned 50 in August 2008. My wife has a widow of 10 years and has 2 children, a son 16 and a daughter 14. In January of 2008 my 2 grand-daughters age 2 and 3 at the time were taken away from my oldest son. After talking with Li ping and with her support and I was given physical guardianship of the girls. About March 2008 with the help of my Congressman I filed and actually was granted a request to expedite from USCIS largely because of the hardship I have trying to raise 2 very little girls and 1 teenage boy by myself. Our case was sent to Guangzhou in mid June and Li ping finally had her interview of September 3rd 2008. In total I have made 4 trips to China to spend time with my wife, the kids, and her family, with the last trip being specifically to support her during and to bring her home to Phoenix after her interview. On average each visit was about 2 weeks long. From what I can gather from my wife the actual interview was not very long, they didn¡¯t look at much of the information she brought with her and they didn¡¯t ask a lot of questions. They did ask how many people currently live with me and this lead to the question about why I had custody of my grand-daughters. I had explained to Li ping the whys but not in minute detail, I had told her that the girls mother and father [my son] supported the court action that I receive guardianship. The main reason being the only other alternative for the court was to slit the girls up and adopt them out. When she answered the question I think she told them that my son had been in jail [truth] and that he couldn¡¯t take care of them so he gave them to me. I am not specifically aware of any other questions that were ask or at least were asked and not answered with good accuracy. As I¡¯m sure you can guess the interview lead to a blue slip. The blue slip requested that I submit my I-864, 2007 tax return, and proof of employment along with a statement of how, when, where I met my ex-wife¡¯s and why those marriages ended ion divorce. It also asked for a statement of how, when, where I met my wife Li ping and how our relationship developed. Since I was there in Guangzhou I did try to speak with the interviewer in hopes of answering the questions and not incurring another lengthy delay. I do struggle with taking care of children, working 50+ hours a week, caring for the house and yard, and everything else, so beyond the fact that I miss my wife very much more delay was something I was hopping to avoid. Of course they wouldn¡¯t meet with me and told me to just do what the blue paper said. So I did, I wrote the statements in reasonable detail and added the papers that they asked for and sent them to Guangzhou from Zhanjiang on September 3rd 2008. I have read storied here of people that have had great successes and I have read stories of people that have had devastating defeats. My question is; what are you opinions of my situation and chances that my wife will receive the will call letter or that specific other results will occur? Do you have any advise or recommendations going forward? To answer the question about the I-864, Yes I submitted it and it did include my son, my grand-daughters, my wife, and my 2 new [step]children. I make a reasonably good living as a Software Development Manager so my income level and assets shouldn't be an issue.