Preemptive Deportation

How many times can I tell this story? Once more, this time written down.

The shortest version is that many missionaries in the Philippines carry a pre-arranged worker visa called a 9(g). That visa used to have a renewal limit of 10 years. What we know is that something angry happen with someone else, the visas were reviewed and the limit was lowered to 5 years.

At the end of the visa you have one of two options: pay fees to downgrade and start again OR leave the country, return on a visitor visa and start again. More often than not we opt to take a cheap flight to Hong Kong or Taiwan, visit friends, and then come back. It’s usually of a similar (or cheaper) price and you get an adventure out of it, so why not? Well, a pandemic and closed borders to foreign nationals regardless of the visa they hold, that’s why not.

Additionally, whatever happened with whomever (as mentioned above) also included a crackdown on downgrades of anyone already past 5 years, replacing them instead with an order to leave the country.

So, you can probably now see where this is going…

I am reaching the end of 10 years and knew I was going to be ordered to leave well before any of the pandemic nonsense began. Little by little people around me were dealing with leaving and coming back, some after great hassle and expense. Since my visa was to expire in the middle of a VERY bad time of year for school life, I had already contacted my visa office about the best way to get around it. My visa office said there was no way around it. Rawr.

Back in March I thought about how lucky I was to not have to deal with visa issues during the quarantine… certainly this would all be over by then. School was announced to be online through December and I thought, “Yay! No more issues with school and having to leave and come back in.” Just ahead of me the HS principal and his family were appealing to stay given the circumstances and I thought “if they get to stay then I should be able to also!” They were ordered to leave.

The writing was on the wall. I was going to be ordered to leave.

So my options were again one of two (albeit not the two I had planned on): wait 2 more months and get ordered to leave OR leave now and spend some of fall and holidays in America.

So here I am with frozen fingers in a pandemic laden election season unsure if the choice I made was the right one. But here I’ll be until I can get into country on a Faith Academy exemption or the borders open to foreigners, whichever comes first.


Follow up answers:

Yes, although my responsibilities have temporarily shifted, I’m still working/teaching for Faith Academy on a 12 soon to be 13 hour time difference. Our classes are mostly asynchronous but there are still plenty of live meetings. A large chunk of my regular job is currently “non-essential.” For those of us whose lives and livelihoods depend on live production, the struggle is real. Please keep finding ways to support.

I am still dependent on my missionary financial support. I understand times are hard for many people, so if you are unable to keep giving, please just let me know. If you have already stopped but may be able to come back later, I would greatly appreciate it. If you are able to increase your gift, I have actually never been fully supported, so that would also be very helpful.

Since I will be in the US longer, I would love to see you if your current situation allows it (and if I can find a vehicle to borrow for a few months).

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Bohol Earthquake Relief

The 2013 Bohol earthquake occurred on October 15, 2013, at 8:12 a.m. (PST) in Bohol, an island province located in Central Visayas, Philippines. The magnitude of the earthquake at the epicenter was recorded at Mw 7.2, located 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) SW of Sagbayan town, at a depth of 12 kilometres (7.5 mi). It affected the whole Central Visayas region, particularly Bohol and Cebu. The quake was felt in the whole Visayas area and as far as Masbate island in the north and Cotabato provinces in southern Mindanao. According to official reports by the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC), 222 were reported dead, 8 were missing, and 976 people were injured.

The Groom Has Cold Feet (and my life as a director)

When I got back to Faith last August I had just had a whirlwind of a summer with no real time for reading plays. So, I began my frantic search for a script that would meet my ultimate goal of “display the talents of this particular group of kids.” Finding scripts is a daunting task. For me as a director it is absolutely the WORST part of the process of producing a play. We aren’t auditioning the world here only our world and that does limit what’s available to us. Sometimes content limits script use particularly when copyrights do not allow for editing. Sometimes the set or costumes or music limits us because what is needed is too elaborate for what we can accomplish. Sometimes we don’t have the right number of males vs females. And sometimes, frustratingly, we are unable to obtain the rights to produce a show because we are outside of America. I find this to be the silliest of all reasons. So sometimes you settle for something you aren’t totally thrilled with but figure you can make work and the process of making it something everyone involved will be thrilled with begins.

Catching Up

A busy life, outdated website software, and getting hacked are all major contrubuting factors to my lack of updates. We’ll just leave it at that. Thanks to one of my besties, Ben Daron, my site is back up and running. I hope to continue getting it up-to-date, but you know me (or maybe you don’t), no promises! 😉

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Becca Stephens: Senior 2012

It’s been a crazy whirlwind of a summer and there are so many things I could talk about but right now this post is a shout out to my girl Becca Stephens!  I love this girl and am so blessed to have had the opportunity to hang out and grab some photographs with her this summer. Watch out, hot stuff ahead! 🙂

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