1. Because while occasional weekend booty calls are quite nice, there's no real dating possible to get to know each other.
2. When Moneygram rejects the money I send to Dayton to pay for CeCe's school fees and I have to call them to sort it out, I have to endure this person asking who he is to me and why I'm sending it. It's none of their damn business.
3. When applying for a visa, we have to prove intent to marry and the reality of the relationship. I am not sending copies of my personal emails to them. It's none of their damn business.
4. Then I will have to fill out more and more forms. The one I dread most is the statement of support. I have to prove I can support them. How? I can afford to bring them here, but then he's working to support US. And if things get tight, I'll be floating on credit cards for a short while - but I have no doubt he'll be able to find work quickly that can support us in at least a minimal lifestyle. Hey, it's not a refugee camp, so nobody should be complaining. So, anyway, I may be begging somebody to sign a statement of support for him, just as a formality.
5. This will be the story of my life for the next 2.5 years, minimum. And then for the rest of my life there will be the questions about why I would marry an African anyway, when, in the wise words of Jenny's mom, "There must be plenty of nice boys in New Orleans." Yeah, but they're not him.
When I was younger, I scoffed at the idea of soulmates. "But what if that one person for me is somewhere in a Buddhist temple is Laos? Or in the Sahara Desert? So, I'll be alone forever because I'll never know him?"
Well, or I'll happen to run into him in a West African refugee camp.
Life's funny. I'm just not laughing too hard right now - I'm more holding my breath and crossing my fingers.
Monday, August 28, 2006
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1 comment:
I'll vouch for #3--I've been on the processing end of all this, and I've heard the stories!....
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