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| Il mio visto per studenti |
I actually think that this signifies the start of something profound for me. It's like the initial event that will cause a chain of significant events. Now that I have one visa from a foreign country, I will want to attain more. It will be like a scrapbook of my adventures. In a way, each and every stamp or visa I get in my passport would symbolize my growth as a person of the world.
Certainly, there are those that perceive the act of collecting foreign stamps in one's passport as a traveler's cliché. However, I connect it to a deeper, more personal meaning. For every stamp I receive, it would be a manifestation of all my experiences in a particular country. Other than the pictures I will take, each stamp will precede all that as a symbol of each adventure's beginning. It will symbolize a conceptual gateway to what I have and will come across. I find this to be quite profound and amazing!
In any case, I'm quite glad that I finally have my passport back in my possession. I have been waiting for its arrival since early October. It wasn't too long of a wait, actually. At most, it took four to five weeks for me to get approved for my student visa.
Now, the next step will be to get the permesso di sogiorno at the local post office once I'm in Italy and show them my passport (with the student visa), proof of international student health insurance, and lettera d'iscrizione (notarized letter informing of my duration of stay, place of stay, and the accepting study abroad program). Basically, the permesso di soggiorno is a stay permit issued to those staying in Italy for longer than 90 days. Those staying less than 90 days are considered "tourists" (therefore not needing a stay permit), whereas individuals staying for more than 90 days are considered "residents". Since I will be in Italy from January 11, 2012 to April 28, 2012 (totaling 99 days), I will be considered a resident (needing a stay permit).
Once I arrive in Italy, I will also have to go to the local police station (questura) and fill out a form called Dichiarazione di Presenza (Declaration of Presence) and get my fingerprints taken within eight days of my arrival. Basically, it's just to inform the authorities that I am legally in the country. If I fail to do so, I will face legal consequences that would include being deported out of the country. Since I'm studying abroad through a school program, I'm sure my school won't allow that to happen, nor would I personally be so negligent.
Along with filling out the Dichiarazione di Presenza and getting fingerprinted, I also have to make a photocopy of my passport from cover to cover along with the pages in between. I've already made two copies (one for my own records) and also made sure to keep a PDF copy on my computer just in case anything were to happen.
At the moment, I'm pretty much on top of every task I need to complete for my trip. Now, I'm just waiting to be notified of my dorm appointment, future roommate, and scholarship acceptance (or rejection). I must also start saving up my money instead of spending it all while I'm still in the U.S. Recently, I've been starting to perceive each expense transaction as "money that could have been spent in Italy". A classmate of mine who was in the same study abroad program last semester said that she spent close to three thousand dollars during her trip. Hopefully, I can save up one to two thousand dollars before my expected departure in about and a half months. I still find it quite surreal that it is only a mere one and a half months away...
In any case, until next time, buonanotte!
KC

You're cute in your visa pic, and that's a tough thing to pull off. Most visa pics look like an enemy took them after a long night of drinking.
ReplyDeleteWhy, thank you. I hope customs will agree with you on that. Haha.
ReplyDeleteI do envy you; travelling and learning (including learning a new language) is something that is best when that window in life presents itself (when you are young!). At my age foreign languages just scare the hell out of me lol. It is indeed important to have all the red tape in order and to be careful about that while you are over there. I'm sure you will be looking around while you are over there too! bfn - Wayne :)
ReplyDeleteI'm surprised you needed a visa to remain in Italy. When I was in France (as a tourist), the only "visa" I got was a stamp at Schiphol International Airport. From there (Amsterdam) to Barcelona (via KLM), then overland to France, there were no other visas or stamps placed upon our $125 U.S. Passports which we could proudly show our friends upon arrival in CONUS. In fact, the only other stamp on our Passports was upon our return to KPDX - - - "bummer". Crossing countries in Europe is like crossing States in America.
ReplyDeleteALL of my ID photos look like I either belong in prison or a motorcycle gang.