Anonymous wrote:Given the facts about the parents’ Green Cards and what’s going on with people entering the country, I would absolutely not let her go.
If something happens to her, the parents cannot go to her.
I’d also worry that (while unlikely) if she has problems abroad or on entry into the US, she will bring unwanted government attention to her non-citizen parents.
Finally, even though she’s a citizen, I would not trust that things will just go smoothly at the border. I would be very uncomfortable having a minor child enter the country alone right now—x100 if she’s not white.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems odd that neither you and your husband can’t make something so important but you want to send your busy high schooler. Plus it sounds like she’s not that keen anyway. Let her stay home. The other adult going can record the ceremony to share with the family.
OP here. Not odd - we're applying for our green card and are not allowed to leave the US while it's processing. Otherwise I'd go!
I just posted and then read this. No way should you send your minor child out of the country if you are not yet a citizen. There is a lot of craziness going on. I would be afraid she could have trouble getting back into the country.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems odd that neither you and your husband can’t make something so important but you want to send your busy high schooler. Plus it sounds like she’s not that keen anyway. Let her stay home. The other adult going can record the ceremony to share with the family.
OP here. Not odd - we're applying for our green card and are not allowed to leave the US while it's processing. Otherwise I'd go!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In September, some of my relatives will gather in a European country to attend a public ceremony marking an event in which my ancestor played a role. My adult kid will attend. My husband and I cannot attend, but I was wondering if my high schooler should go. She has lived in the US all her life and has the least connection to our European history. I feel this would help her understand her origins.
The problem is that she picked a very serious load of classes for 10th grade and she's going to be stressed out about missing a week of school, and might hate traveling to Europe by herself (she'd be picked up at the airport by her brother and relatives, of course).
But this event is not likely to re-occur. The head of the family who invited us is elderly and in poor health. It might be her only chance at meeting him at his best (tasked with this public presentation, he loves those).
What would you do?
Go obviuosly. High school is a nothing burger, doesn't matter in life as long as you graduate, and missing a week of it is no big deal. We used to pull kids out for a week every year to travel. Much more education than being in a babysitting public school.
Anonymous wrote:Seems odd that neither you and your husband can’t make something so important but you want to send your busy high schooler. Plus it sounds like she’s not that keen anyway. Let her stay home. The other adult going can record the ceremony to share with the family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems odd that neither you and your husband can’t make something so important but you want to send your busy high schooler. Plus it sounds like she’s not that keen anyway. Let her stay home. The other adult going can record the ceremony to share with the family.
OP here. Not odd - we're applying for our green card and are not allowed to leave the US while it's processing. Otherwise I'd go!