top

4/18/2007

A post probably not worth reading (or writing, for that matter)

Filed under: — jeff @ 11:59 pm

Well, it’s been another month and a half or so without a new post. The reason behind my lengthy absence is that I’ve been spending most of my time down at the bottom of an old, dry well at the back of a vacant lot down the alleyway behind my apartment. I’ve found that it’s the only place where I can get any kind of thinking done. . . .

Okay, not really. In truth, my month of March was a nonstop pleasure cruise of marital bliss; for you see, Judy came to visit! While I toiled away my days at work, Judy took walks around the neighborhood and enjoyed the fine early spring weather; she unpacked most of the remaining boxes that I had lazily left undisturbed since their arrival from Tokyo; she organized and decorated our apartment; and she even crocheted an entire blanket! Evenings and weekends were spent out exploring California, shopping for furniture and making plans for her greatly anticipated move down here. The time we were together was nothing short of magical, with every moment filled with laughter and smiles (*pukebarfretchcheesiness*). For one month, life was beautiful; but then, as abruptly as she had arrived, Judy was gone. The sun retreated back behind the dark clouds, the garden became overrun with weeds and an endless torrent of melancholy metaphors spewed forth from betwixt my buttocks.

I miss my wife.

Judy at the park

Unfortunately, it doesn’t look like I’ll be seeing her again for quite some time. Mere days after Judy left, I received a notice from the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services informing me that our petition for a K-3 visa had been denied “due to abandonment.” Apparently, a request for further evidence had supposedly been sent to me in November, but I never received it. Curiously, the USCIS website never indicated that a request for evidence had been sent out (I had been checking on the status of the case on a nearly daily basis since October), so I had no way of knowing that a request had been sent and thus I didn’t respond to the request that I didn’t receive and didn’t know had been sent until I received a notice stating that my failure to respond had resulted in the petition being denied. Phone calls to the USCIS proved fruitless and a desperate appeal for assistance to my local congressman’s office appears likely to reach an equally unsuccessful conclusion. Fortunately, our I-130 petition is still pending and has been progressing slowly-but-steadily, so I have some remaining hope of someday being able to get settled with my wife and move forward with our lives together in this country.

Although this situation has been maddeningly frustrating, at the same time, I can’t seem to help but feel that my own relatively petty troubles are hardly comparable to the no-doubt far worse pain and misery being experienced by others elsewhere at this very moment. While I’m getting my panties in a bunch over the evidently limitless incompetence of the US government bureaucracy, people in Iraq are being blown up, people in the US are being gunned down and countless others all over the globe are suffering from whatever other unimaginable acts of violence, cruelty and injustice we humans seem to take great pleasure in inflicting upon one another.

So it goes.

5 Comments

  1. Hey Jeff,

    Glad to know you’re still alive…
    Feel your pain on the visa issues and having to deal with the INS.
    So Judy’s stuck in Canada until she gets a visa?
    Not that I’m not sure you’ve extensively checked every possibilities, but last I was concerned: when married, it only took submitting a green card application to be immediately granted residence (until the green card application itself was examined)… But that was a while back and things might have changed ever since (things starting with a ‘W’, especially).

    At any rate, if you haven’t done so, you might want to consider forking over a couple bucks for expert legal advice: there are always loopholes and tricks…

    Comment by Dave — 4/19/2007 @ 1:08 am

  2. :(
    keep your ears up, man.

    Comment by BB — 4/19/2007 @ 1:21 pm

  3. Man…that’s rude!!! Hang both of you…it’ll sort itself out….Jeff have you spoken with your congressman? I mean…that’s what he/she is there for….to help you sort this mess that the feds made….I’m rootin for both of ya!!!

    Keep smiling both of you!!!

    Comment by Anonymous — 4/19/2007 @ 2:16 pm

  4. Hey Jeff…I’m gonna cross my fingers for ya…get a hold of your useless congressman. These guys are accountable for this screw-up.

    Abandonement? What’s that all about? Man is Washington gone to hell in a hand-basket?

    I’d start making some noise…and I’ll help…

    Comment by Rob — 4/19/2007 @ 2:20 pm

  5. I appreciate your kind words of support.

    I’ve just spent the past four weeks in state of panic and frustration, trying to figure out what could possibly be done to rectify the situation. In the end, however, it seems that it was all for naught and we have no other option but to wait for the spouse visa to (hopefully) be approved. . . whenever that might happen.

    The congressman’s office was able to contact the service center and look into the situation, but the end result was merely a confirmation of what I knew and nothing more. It certainly didn’t do anything to soften my disdain for politicians and the ineptitude inherent to government agencies.

    After contacting several lawyers, nearly all of whom wouldn’t even spare a word without an “initial consultation fee” of anywhere from $150 to $300 (and subsequently were nicely told to go screw themselves), I was able to find one kind attorney who spoke with me at length (free of charge, no less!) and basically said that it wouldn’t even be worth trying to appeal or fight the denial, as a motion to reopen could take anywhere from nine months to a year just to get the case reopened (IF it was even approved), and would then need to be processed from where it was left off. Filing a new petition wouldn’t be worth it either, since it would no doubt take just as long.

    So now all we can do is wait, wait, wait and look forward to having to travel all the way to Montreal for the interview. I can assure you that the USCIS can definitely expect to receive a very firmly-worded letter from yours truly—but only after Judy has received her visa;I certainly wouldn’t want to do anything to put that in jeopardy! :wink:

    Comment by jeff — 4/26/2007 @ 12:56 am

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.

© 2004-2007 All content is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Powered by WordPress

bottom