I have officially relocated to USA, my experience so far, the good, the bad and the ugly

GoodShepherd

Orthodox
Heritage
I arrived in USA from South Africa less than a month ago and wanted to share my long, hard and expensive journey to make it here. No, I am not one of those refugees you recently saw arriving into the USA on TV being greeted by government officials, I came on my own before they actually arrived. Incase you are wondering, I came into America the legal way, we followed the protocols and got all our visas and paper work done which was a slow expensive process due to the exchange rate.

The trip took lots of planning, almost a year and it was a HUGE sacrifice and expense to me and my family, its the biggest risk so far that Iv taken, big because it involves the safety, protection and well-being of my wife and kids. Financially it was also the biggest risk as Iv literally put all our life savings in 1 very risky uncertain basket. It was also quite an emotional toll on us all as we literally had to give up everything we had including our loving pets and all our family, friends, familiarity and our country of birth, not knowing if we will ever have the opportunity of seeing those people ever again or if we would make it here, we secured only a few small sentimental items but we basically had to refine our life's possessions into 1 suitcase each and a backpack, thats it and we came from a big house, big property so we had lots of things.

The trip was long as we didnt fly here directly, it was tiering and we suffered from jet lag when we arrived and 3 days later we all fell ill, with 3 small children we arrived at our destination tired, hungry, thirsty and disorientated. Unfortunately the people who were supposed to help us when we arrived in the US, some family members and one who became a US citizen some time back, let us down and werent able to help us for quite a few days due to some complications and difficulties of their own that we found out later. For about 10 days we had a very dark cloud over us and lived 10 days of hell, it got to the point where I actually had regrets of coming here and worried that I might have made a huge mistake and I even apologized to my wife for leading us here.

It was a shock for me when I arrived as everything is so different to back home and with no help and guidance I almost felt like a new born baby unable to navigate on my own. I know it might sound strange but even taking a shower or turning on a light or opening a door was all a challenge, my wife couldnt even turn on the shower by herself and had to wait for me to get back home from the grocery store to help her, a store that I struggled to buy 3 simple items from, it took me 30min due to all all the products being new to me and all the bright luminous packaging and just how different things work here. Turning on the shower is totally different to back home and even plugging a bath tub I had to call someone to assist me, it so happened the wrong plug was left in the wrong bath tub so it didnt work.

America is a very advanced country, in South Africa we open and close our doors with locks and keys, In America they use keyless locking systems with a digital passcode or access cards, totally foreign to me. All these new things (which are great) made my initial adjustment very difficult.

Fortunately a member of the forum @chancevought whom I had already been in contact with since last year came to our rescue and showed us some real American kindness, he took time out of his day and drove an hour to come and see us and to loan us a car and was the first person to teach me how to drive here as we drive on the other side of the road back home and showed me how to fill up the petrol tank (we have petrol attendants in SA) he also asked us to write him a list of basic survival items we needed, in this part of America Im in you cant survive or do anything without a car or cellphone, we didnt have transport and outside of wifi our phones didnt work, I didnt know whats north or south up or down, the exchange rate from our rands to USD is also terrible and our money is basically worthless here, like peanuts. Our children ate everyday but my wife and I didnt have a decent meal for many days, the best meal I had was at Chance Vought house when I dropped him off in his car, his wife made us hot dogs, Chance Vought said I could have as many as I wanted, I didnt tell him but that was THE best meal I had in days thanks buddy! His wife also packed us a whole lot of oat bars for my kids and a huge bag of chicken nuggets which we still rationing until today, life savers.

Americans are very friendly, kind and helpful people and besides all the amazing help Chance Vought gave us including pots, pans, mugs, plates, great set of knives etc etc other people we met also gave us brand new blankets and even furniture and other household items. When I arrived in the US I stayed at a very low budget hotel with only 2 beds in a single room and we are 5 people with nothing, no cutlery, no broom, no dish clothe or sponge etc so these basic items Chance Vought brought to us were life savers, I no longer had to sweep the floor with toilet paper or wash my plastic disposable cup with the small complimentary shampoo with my bare hands. The hotel staff were all non white but very very friendly, welcoming, kind and helpful, some of the hotel guests you could tell were doggy people like drug addicts but even so we were well treated by them and people even held doors open for us and always smiled and said hello. A higher percentage of the guests were black at the second hotel we moved to as we needed a bigger room which we got, the first hotel more hispanics, once we got the car from Chance Vought we moved around to 3 other places trying to get the best deals and find better living conditions, it wasnt easy moving around all the time with all our luggage and 5 people all squashed into 1 car, it became tiring.

Things have turned around since then and we are doing MUCH better now, we are in contact with our family and see them often now and we have transport and can make calls and texts (no data yet we are told our phones are not compatible in USA), we have a nice place we are staying at that was offered to us for 1 month before the previous owners lease expires, we are all well and have now adjusted and we have the ball rolling, we still have hurdles and challenges coming but God has helped us up to this point.

I am very impressed with America It's a great country, people have a high living standard here, fuel is cheap, great products and stores everywhere, America has a bad name for unhealthy foods but there are many good quality foods too and lots of organic products too, I can also see so far that there are lots of opportunities here to earn a decent living that I havent seen in other countries, no shortage of work and business opportunities. The nature is great too, lots of wildlife and big open spaces everywhere mixed inbetween city and suburban life.

I know there are people on the forum who dont like AI but chat GPT has been our best friend here and really helped us with information and even to fill out documents and forms, get info and demographics of neighborhoods and schools ANY information, we are using chat GPT daily its been a life saver in a foreign land.

In closing, if anyone on here would like to advise me on my asylum process if you have any expertise in this process pls DM me, anyone who lives in America and would like to share some helpful info and advise for me and my family about anything feel free to comment I would greatly appreciate. I would also like to ask for your prayers for me and my family, for those who pray, that Gods will be done and for guidance for us🙏🏻
 
God bless you brother, your strength and the strength of your family is admirable thank you for sharing your journey with us. You have my prayers and I'm sure everyone else here as well I'm sorry I can't help you with the asylum process but if there is anything else at all, material things or whatever else, please by all means list them here and my self as well as I'm sure all the men here will do their best.

What else will help you and your family right now?


@chance vought God Bless you also brother you're a good man
 
God bless you brother, your strength and the strength of your family is admirable thank you for sharing your journey with us. You have my prayers and I'm sure everyone else here as well I'm sorry I can't help you with the asylum process but if there is anything else at all, material things or whatever else, please by all means list them here and my self as well as I'm sure all the men here will do their best.

What else will help you and your family right now?


@chance vought God Bless you also brother you're a good man
Thanks FrancisK I appreciate your prayers and your offer to help us, the next biggest challenge Im having is to find a place to rent thats not through an agency that requires financial records and deposits, I only have 1 month where we currently staying then we have to find our own place which is a very big help by the way.

Some people have offered to help us with furniture etc but for now I havent taken it yet because firstly we moving in a month and secondly I dont have a pick up to move it and it will be costly to hire a truck for just a months stay so would rather wait until we have a proper place to stay. I also need to get x2 US cellphones so our data and GPS can work when we out, for now Im setting my GPS on wifi at home then I can get to my destinations offline then I try log into some free wifi or hotspot from a persons phone to set the GPS to get back home and its been working like that but I need to sort that out. Thats about it.

There are some free services I found and contacted who help with your asylum paper work, I am meeting them soon and hopefully they will assist me, was just asking if anyone had any extra info on this from personal experience. it is an honor and privilege to be here in America and I thank God for this opportunity of being here, now I need to make it work here.
 
Thanks FrancisK I appreciate your prayers and your offer to help us, the next biggest challenge Im having is to find a place to rent thats not through an agency that requires financial records and deposits, I only have 1 month where we currently staying then we have to find our own place which is a very big help by the way.

Some people have offered to help us with furniture etc but for now I havent taken it yet because firstly we moving in a month and secondly I dont have a pick up to move it and it will be costly to hire a truck for just a months stay so would rather wait until we have a proper place to stay. I also need to get x2 US cellphones so our data and GPS can work when we out, for now Im setting my GPS on wifi at home then I can get to my destinations offline then I try log into some free wifi or hotspot from a persons phone to set the GPS to get back home and its been working like that but I need to sort that out. Thats about it.

There are some free services I found and contacted who help with your asylum paper work, I am meeting them soon and hopefully they will assist me, was just asking if anyone had any extra info on this from personal experience. it is an honor and privilege to be here in America and I thank God for this opportunity of being here, now I need to make it work here.
You can get relatively cheap prepaid SIM cards for your phone at places like Walmart. Unfortunately phone and internet service is expensive here compared to Europe for example. But you could probably find a decent plan for $25 a month with a few GB.

And cell phones from overseas will work with data here generally, especially newer ones. But some may not support all the frequency bands used here so could get poorer service. You have to check what your phone supports.

https://esim.holafly.com/internet/use-cell-phone-usa/
 
I’m glad I could assist in some way, you have the courage that most people only say they have. I hope you’re keeping a journal, you’re going to be a legend for your grandkids!
You assisted in a great way, I think that most of us here on the forum if we were pushed or in a situation where they would have to make a decision and move like I just had to I think they would also be able to do it, I dont really feel courageous to be honest.

I hope my kids and grandkids will benefit from this some day🙏🏻 when I used to mention to people in South Africa that we coming to America they usually would tell me that its better that Im doing that for my kids because theres no future in South Africa, those were comments I heard often.
 
I arrived in USA from South Africa less than a month ago and wanted to share my long, hard and expensive journey to make it here. No, I am not one of those refugees you recently saw arriving into the USA on TV being greeted by government officials, I came on my own before they actually arrived. Incase you are wondering, I came into America the legal way, we followed the protocols and got all our visas and paper work done which was a slow expensive process due to the exchange rate.

The trip took lots of planning, almost a year and it was a HUGE sacrifice and expense to me and my family, its the biggest risk so far that Iv taken, big because it involves the safety, protection and well-being of my wife and kids. Financially it was also the biggest risk as Iv literally put all our life savings in 1 very risky uncertain basket. It was also quite an emotional toll on us all as we literally had to give up everything we had including our loving pets and all our family, friends, familiarity and our country of birth, not knowing if we will ever have the opportunity of seeing those people ever again or if we would make it here, we secured only a few small sentimental items but we basically had to refine our life's possessions into 1 suitcase each and a backpack, thats it and we came from a big house, big property so we had lots of things.

The trip was long as we didnt fly here directly, it was tiering and we suffered from jet lag when we arrived and 3 days later we all fell ill, with 3 small children we arrived at our destination tired, hungry, thirsty and disorientated. Unfortunately the people who were supposed to help us when we arrived in the US, some family members and one who became a US citizen some time back, let us down and werent able to help us for quite a few days due to some complications and difficulties of their own that we found out later. For about 10 days we had a very dark cloud over us and lived 10 days of hell, it got to the point where I actually had regrets of coming here and worried that I might have made a huge mistake and I even apologized to my wife for leading us here.

It was a shock for me when I arrived as everything is so different to back home and with no help and guidance I almost felt like a new born baby unable to navigate on my own. I know it might sound strange but even taking a shower or turning on a light or opening a door was all a challenge, my wife couldnt even turn on the shower by herself and had to wait for me to get back home from the grocery store to help her, a store that I struggled to buy 3 simple items from, it took me 30min due to all all the products being new to me and all the bright luminous packaging and just how different things work here. Turning on the shower is totally different to back home and even plugging a bath tub I had to call someone to assist me, it so happened the wrong plug was left in the wrong bath tub so it didnt work.

America is a very advanced country, in South Africa we open and close our doors with locks and keys, In America they use keyless locking systems with a digital passcode or access cards, totally foreign to me. All these new things (which are great) made my initial adjustment very difficult.

Fortunately a member of the forum @chancevought whom I had already been in contact with since last year came to our rescue and showed us some real American kindness, he took time out of his day and drove an hour to come and see us and to loan us a car and was the first person to teach me how to drive here as we drive on the other side of the road back home and showed me how to fill up the petrol tank (we have petrol attendants in SA) he also asked us to write him a list of basic survival items we needed, in this part of America Im in you cant survive or do anything without a car or cellphone, we didnt have transport and outside of wifi our phones didnt work, I didnt know whats north or south up or down, the exchange rate from our rands to USD is also terrible and our money is basically worthless here, like peanuts. Our children ate everyday but my wife and I didnt have a decent meal for many days, the best meal I had was at Chance Vought house when I dropped him off in his car, his wife made us hot dogs, Chance Vought said I could have as many as I wanted, I didnt tell him but that was THE best meal I had in days thanks buddy! His wife also packed us a whole lot of oat bars for my kids and a huge bag of chicken nuggets which we still rationing until today, life savers.

Americans are very friendly, kind and helpful people and besides all the amazing help Chance Vought gave us including pots, pans, mugs, plates, great set of knives etc etc other people we met also gave us brand new blankets and even furniture and other household items. When I arrived in the US I stayed at a very low budget hotel with only 2 beds in a single room and we are 5 people with nothing, no cutlery, no broom, no dish clothe or sponge etc so these basic items Chance Vought brought to us were life savers, I no longer had to sweep the floor with toilet paper or wash my plastic disposable cup with the small complimentary shampoo with my bare hands. The hotel staff were all non white but very very friendly, welcoming, kind and helpful, some of the hotel guests you could tell were doggy people like drug addicts but even so we were well treated by them and people even held doors open for us and always smiled and said hello. A higher percentage of the guests were black at the second hotel we moved to as we needed a bigger room which we got, the first hotel more hispanics, once we got the car from Chance Vought we moved around to 3 other places trying to get the best deals and find better living conditions, it wasnt easy moving around all the time with all our luggage and 5 people all squashed into 1 car, it became tiring.

Things have turned around since then and we are doing MUCH better now, we are in contact with our family and see them often now and we have transport and can make calls and texts (no data yet we are told our phones are not compatible in USA), we have a nice place we are staying at that was offered to us for 1 month before the previous owners lease expires, we are all well and have now adjusted and we have the ball rolling, we still have hurdles and challenges coming but God has helped us up to this point.

I am very impressed with America It's a great country, people have a high living standard here, fuel is cheap, great products and stores everywhere, America has a bad name for unhealthy foods but there are many good quality foods too and lots of organic products too, I can also see so far that there are lots of opportunities here to earn a decent living that I havent seen in other countries, no shortage of work and business opportunities. The nature is great too, lots of wildlife and big open spaces everywhere mixed inbetween city and suburban life.

I know there are people on the forum who dont like AI but chat GPT has been our best friend here and really helped us with information and even to fill out documents and forms, get info and demographics of neighborhoods and schools ANY information, we are using chat GPT daily its been a life saver in a foreign land.

In closing, if anyone on here would like to advise me on my asylum process if you have any expertise in this process pls DM me, anyone who lives in America and would like to share some helpful info and advise for me and my family about anything feel free to comment I would greatly appreciate. I would also like to ask for your prayers for me and my family, for those who pray, that Gods will be done and for guidance for us🙏🏻
Welcome to the USA to you and your family. Just remember -- the pump with the green handle is diesel!
 
Thanks FrancisK I appreciate your prayers and your offer to help us, the next biggest challenge Im having is to find a place to rent thats not through an agency that requires financial records and deposits, I only have 1 month where we currently staying then we have to find our own place which is a very big help by the way.

Some people have offered to help us with furniture etc but for now I havent taken it yet because firstly we moving in a month and secondly I dont have a pick up to move it and it will be costly to hire a truck for just a months stay so would rather wait until we have a proper place to stay. I also need to get x2 US cellphones so our data and GPS can work when we out, for now Im setting my GPS on wifi at home then I can get to my destinations offline then I try log into some free wifi or hotspot from a persons phone to set the GPS to get back home and its been working like that but I need to sort that out. Thats about it.

There are some free services I found and contacted who help with your asylum paper work, I am meeting them soon and hopefully they will assist me, was just asking if anyone had any extra info on this from personal experience. it is an honor and privilege to be here in America and I thank God for this opportunity of being here, now I need to make it work here.

I have reverence and respect for strong Christian men, you are definitely that brother.

I just donated a pallet of new housewares to the church from a closed wholesaling business, I have a little bit left that I didn't have room on the pallet for. I also have a large amount of new condition, some still with the tags, high end clothing that just doesn't fit me anymore (that's a different story). Casual shirts, dress shirts, nice suits, jeans, pants....I don't know what size you wear but would any of that help you? I'm just thinking here, I guess material things maybe right now aren't so useful to you while you're looking for more permanent residence but maybe down the line.

Would you mind revealing what part of the country you're in? Maybe there is someone here that can help with housing.

What is the barrier on the cell phones, is it cash right now?
 
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You can get relatively cheap prepaid SIM cards for your phone at places like Walmart. Unfortunately phone and internet service is expensive here compared to Europe for example. But you could probably find a decent plan for $25 a month with a few GB.

And cell phones from overseas will work with data here generally, especially newer ones. But some may not support all the frequency bands used here so could get poorer service. You have to check what your phone supports.

https://esim.holafly.com/internet/use-cell-phone-usa/
Yip thats the problem Im having its the frequency bands, Iv tried at various mobile phone stores and they checked compatibility and IMEI numbers etc snd they all said our phones are not compatible even on Chat GPT but Im still playing around with the settings to try and get something out of it. We already have x2 sims cards so we have to use them now they paid for already it was quite pricey.

Yes somethings are priced very strangely in the US I find, for example I find the toilet paper very expensive but then electronic appliances are super cheap and even some meat is very cheap. I bought a 4 slice toaster for $19 which is basically the price of a pizza, some pizzas cost $30, I would never be able to by a 4-slice toaster in South Africa for so cheap or for the same price as a pizza. Also to fill up my petrol tank I find it very cheap it cost only $35 where in South Africa it would cost me about $83 dollars to fill up my tank with a currency thats x20 weaker than the USD which was really expensive to do in South Africa, most cars in South Africa couldnt afford to fill up their tanks they just topped it up as they needed while here its the other way around the garages are all empty and people fill up their tanks to the max each time.

Walmart is an amazing store I was impressed, they have everything and can even change your car oil and tyres!
 
Yip thats the problem Im having its the frequency bands, Iv tried at various mobile phone stores and they checked compatibility and IMEI numbers etc snd they all said our phones are not compatible even on Chat GPT but Im still playing around with the settings to try and get something out of it. We already have x2 sims cards so we have to use them now they paid for already it was quite pricey.

Yes somethings are priced very strangely in the US I find, for example I find the toilet paper very expensive but then electronic appliances are super cheap and even some meat is very cheap. I bought a 4 slice toaster for $19 which is basically the price of a pizza, some pizzas cost $30, I would never be able to by a 4-slice toaster in South Africa for so cheap or for the same price as a pizza. Also to fill up my petrol tank I find it very cheap it cost only $35 where in South Africa it would cost me about $83 dollars to fill up my tank with a currency thats x20 weaker than the USD which was really expensive to do in South Africa, most cars in South Africa couldnt afford to fill up their tanks they just topped it up as they needed while here its the other way around the garages are all empty and people fill up their tanks to the max each time.

Walmart is an amazing store I was impressed, they have everything and can even change your car oil and tyres!
I got new tires installed at Walmart once and let's just say their mechanics didn't seem like the sharpest tools in the shed. It's a risk taking your car there from what I've heard.
 
I have reverence and respect for strong Christian men, you are definitely that brother.

I just donated a pallet of new housewares to the church from a closed wholesaling business, I have a little bit left that I didn't have room on the pallet for. I also have a large amount of new condition, some still with the tags, high end clothing that just doesn't fit me anymore (that's a different story). Casual shirts, dress shirts, nice suits, jeans, pants....I don't know what size you wear but would any of that help you? I'm just thinking here, I guess material things maybe right now aren't so useful to you while you're looking for more permanent residence but maybe down the line.

Would you mind reveling what part of the country you're in? Maybe there is someone here that can help with housing.

What is the barrier on the cell phones, is it cash right now?
Thanks Francis I appreciate that, for now I cant accept that as I first need a more permanent place to stay so cant take too many big things its going to be a problem and expense to move that around when moving house, clothing Im ok with I brought my clothing so we dont need clothing and its all in great condition but houseware stuff further down the line I might take, Im hoping further down the line.

For privacy issues and also for my asylum Im a little worried to share what state Im in and also for Chance Voughts privacy but people could DM me and let me know what state they live in if they like.

Regarding the cellphone a family member here said he is going to give me an old phone of his that he doesnt use, thats gonna help me with my GPS and data when Im out, my US sim card will work on that phone.
 
Once you find a place and get settled in, thrift stores and garage sales (depending what part of the country you are in) can both be excellent ways to get great deals on quality stuff, or at least find something at a cheaper price than retail to get you by in the meantime. Also FB marketplace is a great place to find quality free stuff, especially for larger furniture items like sofa, dresser, bed frames, etc...
 
For your cellular internet:

There is a Reddit group called NoContract (https://www.reddit.com/r/NoContract/). It has updates with cheap options.

I am using Panda Mobile and I pay $15/month for "unlimited" data/calls/SMS. The data limit is 30GB/month and then it slows down but fast enough for Voip calls, emails, etc. Unfortunately the promo is over and now it might be $25/month. But it is to show discounts you can find in that Reddit group.

There is a trick where you instal Uber Driver app and show to a T-mobile (or AT&T) representative at their stores and ask for a "business plan" that costs only $10-$15/month for unlimited data. It is very useful since you can use Google Voice to get an US number and use the app for calls/SMS. Check Reddit NoContract to find a recent solution.

If you don't use a lot of data, you can save a lot of money by using Roamless (Roamless.com). You'll pay more per GB of data but it does not expire. You'll put $5 for 2GB that can last a year or more if you don't use that much data. No monthly payments. Use Google Voice for calls or Roamless app itself.




For nutrition:
Get an Air Fryer. It is easy to use and you can teach your kids how to use it. Throw a good/cheap source of protein like chicken drums or pork ribeye. For sides you can buy frozen vegetables; Those are affordable and you can just microwave it for 2 minutes. Stay away from processed foods.


There are more "life hacks" but that is a good start.
 
First off, a warm welcome to the USA!

...can make calls and texts (no data yet we are told our phones are not compatible in USA),
You may want to read up on CDMA vs GSM when looking at mobile carriers in the USA. That could explain why your phones are not compatible in the USA.

I always buy used GSM unlocked mobile phones, which I've done for years because of international travel that allowed me to swap sim cards in another country.

Also, if you are looking to buy mobile phones, I would strongly suggest you look for used GSM unlocked phones on www.backmarket.com.

I would also like to ask for your prayers for me and my family, for those who pray, that Gods will be done and for guidance for us🙏🏻
Will do.🙏

Have you guys found or look into an Orthodox Church yet? And are you familiar with the various types of Orthodox Churches' affiliated dioceses, organizations, etc. in the USA? (I'm guessing you haven't decided on where to live yet...?)
 
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Incredible story and Godly courage @GoodShepard !! Welcome to the last holdout of Western Civilization.

Pretty amazing that you were able to find help with a fellow forum member @chance vought , God bless you Mr. vought, you are a Good Neighbor and deserve high praise. The fact that this forum facilitated such an exchange already justifies its entire existence, even if nothing else were to ever come from this place.

May Christ be with you @GoodShepherd , I hope you can find a good Church soon! Keep us updated with your journey and don't hesitate to ask any questions.
 
God bless you and your family Good Shepherd! You have been through a lot and I'm glad you made it.

Reading your story reminds me of how much easier I had it when I was single and moved abroad. It was my first time to deal with visas, phones, international bank transfers, etc. I couldn't have succeeded without a lot of help from friends of friends and acquaintances, and I think everyone understands this and wants to help travelers.

I'm glad you've found Americans to be friendly and helpful!

As far as phones, there was already a link posted where you can buy, but let me add another one I think is good where I've bought some used phones.


Mobile phones / cell phones can get technical, so don't hesitate to pose questions here.
 
I will echo the voices shared by @FrancisK and others above.

First, big ups to @chance vought for helping out big time in the real world. You are the man.

Clap Reaction GIF


Props to @analyst_green and others for providing practical advice.

Also, to mirror what @Samseau noted, this thread demonstrates what this forum can be when it is at its best - real world charity and real world friendships. Once you've had these kind of experiences, it will change the way you view the underlying meaning of the forum. I hope this thread encourages other members to connect with each other.

@GoodShepherd - may God bless you and your family. Well done on taking a bold leap into new territory and guiding your family to a better future in the longer term. You are a man of courage and your family is lucky to have you as their lead.

Salute Honor GIF by CBS


I don't live in the US so can't help with logistical advice. Hopefully you can find a local church community that will welcome you and your family soon.

If you have any concerns about privacy, you could consider starting a thread in the private sub-forum here. This is not public and is only accessible to heritage members such as yourself who have been connected to their past accounts on RVF. This may allow you to get more tailored information, e.g., according to your state-based services. That said, I still recommend keeping this thread updated to reach a wider audience.

Keep us updated with how it goes. You have friends you haven't met all around the world wanting the best for you.
 
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