Jump to content

RunningWithScissors

Members
  • Posts

    97
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    9

RunningWithScissors last won the day on June 16 2021

RunningWithScissors had the most liked content!

Reputation

23 Excellent

Contact Methods

  • Website URL
    http://discoverseattle.net/cambodia/

Profile Information

  • Location
    Seattle WA

Recent Profile Visitors

199 profile views
  1. I just saw this today, I'm very sorry to hear this. If CFL needs hosting and some disk space, I may be able to provide it at no cost. If you want, please contact me and we'll see what we can arrange. CFL was a huge help to me back when I needed it (going on 10 years now, sheesh) and if I can return the favor somehow, I'd be happy to do so.
  2. Just dropping by to say hello... :)

  3. We do plan to get her a US Passport for sure, but hell, that'll be easy...I could do that in my sleep with my frontal lobe tied behind my back.
  4. I'm very proud to announce America's newest United States Citizen. Sakha passed her US Citizenship Exam this morning, April 30th 2012, and was sworn in a few hours later around 12:30pm. http://discoverseattle.net/forums/Smileys/akyhne/smiley.gif To get to this point we fought our way through the State Department, the California Immigration Service Center, the National Visa Center in Vermont, the Department of Homeland Security investigators, the Phnom Penh Police Department, the Cambodian Records Center, the Cambodian Emigration Authority, the United States Embassy in Phnom Penh, US Customs & Immigration Services, and finally the US Customs & Border Protection. (I'm sure many of you went through similar mazes.) We turned in over 1,000 pages of documentation, had her fingerprints taken 4 times (at $680 a shot), sat through multiple interviews and jumped through numerous other hoops. After almost 4 years of this sort of thing, she is now a full-fledged United States Citizen. And believe me, we are soooooooooo done. lol I want to make special mention of this site... CandleForLove was very, very helpful to us in many ways, and Sakha and I thank each and every one of you here. It's been a long journey and CFL helped make it possible. Thank you from the bottom of our hearts. Cheers!
  5. We've been told that if we get an appointment early in the day (which we do) then she can be sworn in the same day, else we can come back another day. In this case it's just gonna be me and her so the sooner the better. Man, after this last hurdle we are SO done. We spend time every day quizzing her on the US Citizenship Test site I made (shameless plug!) and she's batting about 99 out of 100 right. There are a couple that she still trips over but I'd bet almost anything that she's gonna pass the first time through.
  6. Well....after a fair amount of screwing around, we finally have a date for the US Citizenship test. We had to make an appointment online to go down to USCIS, and at that appointment we were able to make an appointment for the actual appointment to get Sakha's fingerprints taken (sheesh) Cost about 4 weeks of time what with making the appointment to make the appointment. I know, it's *#^! crazy, but that's the way they do it here. At the first appointment I told them, "Look, she's here and she even brought her fingerprints with her, can't you just take them now?" Oh no, we can't do that. That would be, like, crazy or something. So we finally got the prints taken and we just today got the notice of the test dat: April 30th. We'll show up there early in the morning and she'll do the test. If she passes then we can hang around until ~1:00 when they do the swearing in ceremony. I'll let you know how it goes.....wish us luck!
  7. A while back I had posted about a page I had created for my wife to help her practice for the N-400 US Citizenship test. It was hosted at http://discoverseatt...et/citizenship/. I'd mentioned it here so that other people could use it if they wanted to. I sort of forgot about the page and didn't pay much attention to it. Well, apparently word got out, lol, and the page started getting boatloads of traffic. I had no idea. I only found out when my wife pointed me to an article one of her clients had recently written about it: American Citizen. (It's kind of a cute article, and yeah, that's my wife the lady is talking about Now, the last time I looked it had maybe 30,000 questions taken. But when I went back and looked I saw that it now had over 1.5 million questions taken so far (!!). So, I guess a lot of people are using it (duh). Because of the traffic and apparent popularity, I decided to move it to a dedicated domain. You can now find the N-400 US Citizenship test at: uscitizentest.net. I'd like to improve the site a bit, but I'm not sure what would be useful. If you have any suggestions, please let me know and I'll see what I can do. But in any case, I'll be updating it whenever any of the questions or answers change. Please feel free to send people there if they're getting ready to take the N-400 US Citizenship test. http://uscitizentest.net
  8. I'm not sure how it is there, but you can't do that here. They won't let you into the building without a letter and an appointment. You can't even call them (they refused to give us the phone number so we could contact them). It's US Mail only. I hate those people. DHS runs the lobby like it's the entrance to a secret nuclear facility. Come to think of it, back in the 80s/90s when I was going to various nuke sites, it was easier getting into them than into the USCIS building. I used to go to Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, GE Vallecitos, INEL, Rocky Flats, and gobs of other nuclear research sites and it truly was easier getting into them than it is getting into USCIS nowadays. I can only imagine what it's like getting into Rocky Flats today. They probably do a colonoscopy now. On a brighter note, I'd mentioned some time ago that my wife and I introduced a friend of mine to a lovely Cambodian lady. They've been married a while now (I was his best man!) and they're retiring to Cambodia in ~75 days, he has his tickets and everything. He is sooooooooooooooo ready to go. He sold off most of his stuff, gave away a bunch more, and now they're just waiting to go.
  9. Seriously, the people at USCIS are retarded jerks, and that's about the nicest thing I can say about them. We applied for my wife's US Citizenship and got the notice for the "final" biometrics, scheduled for January 19th. On the 19th we head down to DHS/USCIS in a pretty ugly snowstorm and fight our way down to Tukwila where the office is. Traffic was just insane, driving conditions were gruesome, but we weren't going to miss this appointment for ANYTHING. We get down there only to find out that DHS has closed the building due to snow. (WTF?? I mean, WE could get there, why couldn't they??) So anyway, the office is closed. We get back home and I call USCIS. We're told just to "sit tight" and that since they were the ones that canceled the appointment they would reschedule it and contact us. So we wait. And wait. And wait. Over the next 3 weeks I call them 4 times asking when we can expect to hear from them. Each time we're told to "be patient", "sit tight", and not to worry, that they'll contact us. They wouldn't tell us how long it might be before we heard from them. Estimates ranged from "a couple of weeks" to "six months" (!!!). Yesterday I called again and wouldn't take 'no' for an answer. After a bit of yelling and arm-twisting we're told that it's our responsbility to contact USCIS for a new appointment, even though they were the ones that canceled it. WTF?? That's right- if we'd just sat passively we would have been waiting until the Sun burned out, because USCIS "does not and will not reschedule appointments" that they cancel due to weather. You have to contact them, even if they're the ones that screwed everything up. What a bunch of a-holes. So we sent them a certified, return-receipt letter requesting a new appointment, and we requested that they expedite it because we lost nearly a month due to their incompetence. We'll see what happens. *^&@%!
  10. So far we like the Hyundai a lot. Fit and finish seems very good, it's reasonably quiet and it's peppy enough so you won't die merging onto the freeway. Yep, we're hoping (expecting) that the citizenship process should go smoothly.
  11. Been a few months since I posted here...I'd submitted my wife's US citizenship papers but I'd sent them in too early (my mistake). December 15th I updated the forms and sent them in again, and we just received the "application received and is in process" notice. Now we wait to see if all the stuff we sent is what they want to see or not. On a "what's new" front, my wife just bought her first car ever and is so proud of it. She picked a cute little "girl car" (her words), a blue Hyundai Elantra. It's no luxury car (trust me on this) but overall it seems like a pretty decent little commuter car. We had a nice quiet holiday season so far and we're looking forward to the new year. Happy holidays to everyone here, and may your new year bring good things! It's good to see everyone here, I recognize a few names from way back when.
  12. After a long and somewhat frustrating discussion with USCIS, I'm still unsure, lol. The paperwork says to use the date on her Permanent Resident card, not her Green Card (Employment Authorization card). It's a little confusing.
  13. Errrrrrrrrrrrrr. I got a big ol' package from USCIS in the mail today and I figured it was another bunch of forms and maybe a Citizenship study booklet (that's what it felt like). Noooooooope. lol They kicked our application back to us because, as they explained, Sakha hasn't been in the country long enough. My response was, "WTF?? B*llsh*t!" But they're right, and it's my fault for not paying close enough attention to the forms, or at least the actual meaning of some of the fine points. Doh. It says that the applicant must have been married to a US citizen for at least three years (check) and that the applicant must also have been a permanent resident for 3 years. I mistook that to mean that the clock started ticking from the day she arrived, which is wrong. It's from the date that the applicant received their Permanent Resident status. My bad. Okay, so since that's the case, we just have to wait till December to file. No big deal. Unfortunately, I have a friend who is running along a similar timeline to me and he and his wife plan to emigrate to Cambodia the moment she gets her US citizenship and passport. He was also under the impression that the clock started when his wife arrived, not from the date she received her Permanent Resident Card. And that's gonna add 6 or 7 months onto their earliest departure date. So that's gonna bugger up his plans a bit, but it is what it is. Live and learn, lol.
  14. I'm happy to report that we sent my wife's N-400 Citizenship Application in about a week ago. We got the USPS confirmation of delivery and we're waiting for the USCIS "official" confirmation of delivery/acceptance. Some time ago I made a simple little web app for those who need or want to study the N-400 test questions. It has the correct info for each State (governor, representatives, capitol, etc). You can take the questions in order or randomly and you can display the answer(s) to each question. In case anyone wants to use it I'll post the URL here again. My wife (and a few of her friends) have found it to be a big help in studying the questions. N-400 US Citizenship Test Questions & Answers I'll let you know what happens next, but we're in the home stretch.... -
  15. Thank you, I'm glad you like it! I've run through the questions quite a few times with my wife, and I have to say that I don't know if I could qualify to become a US citizen, lol. I knew a lot of the answers by osmosis, but I couldn't name my state reps or senators (doh!). And I couldn't have told you who one of the writers of the Federalist Papers was. Lol, at 83%, you're reasonably safe to go bar-hopping. If you liked that one there are some others that you might enjoy: Online Pregnancy Test Online Rorschach Test The Death Psychic
×
×
  • Create New...