Quote:
Originally Posted by WarpSpeed
If I wanted to suggest something weird, I'd pick Zimbabwe. My logic with Canada was that U.S. people can go there pretty easily, and I figured you'd be able to get in because you're still married to a Canadian. There would have to be something else to draw you there, though, like friends you haven't seen in a while. If they don't exist, then yeah, it doesn't make sense.
Oh well.
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Oh, I understand the concept, but in practice, it wouldn't work that well. I have nowhere to stay in Canada, am not allowed to work there or stay as anything other than a tourist and have no friends there.
My husband withdrew his sponsorship of my becoming a Canadian resident when I broke up, and since they hadn't even started processing it yet, in effect it's as though I had never asked for it from a legal standpoint, giving me the same rights relating to staying in Canada, working there, etc, as any other French citizen. It doesn't matter to them at all that I'm married to a Canadian and doesn't change a thing, apart from making it possible for me to ask for residency with him as a sponsor. And I covered that.
As for friends I had in Canada, I know a few people that I met online through forums and chatrooms, but the people I knew in person have stopped talking to me ever since I broke up with him, and would be very hostile to me being around them. On top of that, they all live in Alberta. If I wanted something practical (so, that, say, he would meet with me on the weekends or something), then I would want to go with the Southern part of British Columbia, which would be closest to him.
I certainly appreciate the advice/suggestion, but if that was a good option, believe me I would have done it already

It's been two years of going back and forth at this point.
My lawyer has just confirmed an appointment for next Monday though, so I'll see with her if anything is happening.