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Vice Visa
Entry 5 of 12 | show all | print this entry |
So at this point I should have been flying somewhere over Europe or so. However, it has been a long and disappointing road that led me to still be here in the States today. Lindsey and I applied for our visas over a month ago, hearing that the processing and shipping time should only take 5 days total. So we fill out our applications and mail them in, assuming all is well. Two weeks later, still no word. Then Lindsey hears that her app has been tagged, since she mentioned the word "mission trip" as her purpose of visit. They needed more information. A week later, I get a call. My app has also been tagged. I used that magical "mission" word as well. We contacted Dr. Anil Henry at the Mungeli Hospital, and he wrote a letter about her, Tadd, and me (since we all mailed in our apps together). We assume that letter will be enough information, making our visit sound as far from an actual mission trip as possible. We assume we'll hear something any day after that. A few more weeks go by. The trip is getting closer and closer. 11 days before we leave, I call the Travisa place in Texas, where we mailed our passports (that's right, I stuck my passport in the mail to Texas into some stranger's hands...because that is what I was told to do), and they said that once you have been tagged as a missionary, it could take 6 months or more to get approved, if at all. 6 months. That we did not have. Lindsey and I start to panic, just a little. We get on the phone with our state senators and friends who have friends in high places, we check out other possibilities that will give us any kind of option, but mostly all we can do is hope, and pray. Silly us for telling the truth about what we were going to do. Somehow the other 5 in our group instinctively knew to put "tourist" or "visiting" as their purpose of trip. How we were left out of the loop, I'll never know. It also did not help that we also mailed our applications in the same day all the terrorist tragedy hit the news. Bad timing. It probably also did not help that my occupation is listed as pastor. Again, I have this bad habit of telling the truth. It's not like I planned on wearing any Christian t-shirts or trying to baptize everyone I met in the Ganges River. Even I know better than that. But alas, once we were tagged as missionaries, there was really nothing we could do except wait. And wait we did.At one point we got hopeful. I was starting to call the Texas representatives every day to ask them to check on my passport status. The Tuesday before Christmas they said the Indian Consulate was trying to get as many visas finished as possible before the holiday, and there was a chance mine could arrive at 5:30 that night. I got hopeful. A little. Then I realized that 5:30 Texas time was actually about 7:30 or so my time. So I distracted myself with a good friend and a funny movie that night (Bolt--hilarious. Love the hamster!) and checked online around 9:00 that night. No such luck. That left the next day, Wednesday, Christmas Eve, as our last possible chance at getting approved in time for it to be mailed back to us before our flight left. After the 5:00 Christmas Eve service, everyone wished me a safe trip and lots of luck. I had begun letting some people know that it might not happen. Just before the 9:00 service, I checked online. No visa. Our deadline had ended.
Christmas day was a little depressing, as the full reality of this much anticipated and much hoped for trip had been put to an end. It was at least a blessing to have a few days off to spend with family and friends, and not have to face work for a little while, trying to explain. Friday morning Lindsey and I canceled our flights. We would both be losing money. Lindsey unfortunately could not get her ticket refunded. We're still fighting that. Mine was refundable except for a $300 fine. While it sounds like a lot, I was grateful it was such a small percentage of the total.
So it is incredibly frustrating and disappointing. There is another group going in February. There is an option to join that crew and try to make it all work out. However, after being tagged as a missionary, there is no teling if I reapply as a tourist, if I would get approved right away, or if my name has been red flagged as a missionary forever. It would cost another $95 just to reapply, with the possibility that I'll just get turned down again. Is it worth it? It's a gamble. I guess time will tell.
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