Inseption
Not so long ago, I moved from Russia to the United States as a permanent resident. I am already over sixty and I moved in with my children (these are my daughter Valentina, her husband Levy, and their son (my grandson) Mark).
I visited them several times before I moved. I described my travel impressions in letters to my friends at home. My kids have been pushing me for a long time to start posting these blog posts. I visited them the first time in 2014.
A lot has changed since then in the world — time, people, views, but I have always tried to write about everyday life, about travel, about life as it is, without discussing the political situation.
Briefly about my children. How did they get to America.
Moving.
The children left for America in January 2012 and live in Arizona. Before that, my daughter, when she was still studying at the university, and then, having got married, together with her husband participated in the Green Card lottery for several years.
This lottery is run by the US State Department. True, I do not know if it is being held now, since it was periodically closed for some countries, from which there was already a large flow of winners. I also don’t know how it works now in connection with the current political situation. And before, both spouses could participate, but winning one of them allowed the whole family to leave.
In parallel with participating in the lottery, they also applied for emigration to Canada. There, the selection was carried out according to the list of professions needed by the country (which changed annually), according to the number of points that are gained depending on the degree of education, and a certain number of IELTS points is also required. This is an international language exam administered by the British Council. My daughter successfully passed this exam, and they also applied to Canada.
In May 2011, they won the American Green Card, which allows them to become a resident of the country and gives them the right to work. They collected certificates, made the necessary vaccinations, and the whole family had to go through a medical commission in Moscow and obtain visas at the embassy.
But as they say: “Do not confuse tourism with emigration.”
First time
Now I had to deal with the arrangement of my family from scratch, look for a job, buy the basic necessities. Here, the first necessity is a car, since city transport does not go everywhere and does not go to every job, and in 47 ° heat one does not like walking.
For the first two months they lived with relatives, who by this time had been in Arizona for about 12 years and had made a lot of friends from the former USSR. Almost all of them are related to IT technologies. The end of the 90s, it was a period when a lot of programmers left.
One of their friends said they needed a graphic designer for a job. The son-in-law had a large portfolio and recommendations from American employers, for whom he performed work in Russia via the Internet. So he pretty quickly, by local standards, got a job in his specialty, which does not happen often here (not counting programmers))). But even this “quickly” is obtained not earlier than a month, since documents on a residence permit and a tax number must arrive, without which it is impossible to work.
At first, Levy worked from home. One of their friends helped with buying a car. They had to buy it with cash, because banks didn’t give them a loan because the children didn’t have a credit history. To got a license to drive a car in America, if you don’t know how to drive, you must first pass the theory and get a temporary driving license with a teaching person. My children in Russia didn’t have a car and didn’t know how to drive, so another friend of our relatives taught them how to drive and navigate the new city.
As soon as the son-in-law got a job, the children rented an apartment. What does it mean to start a “life from scratch” — no spoons, no forks, no plates, no furniture, only clothes, but computers. You can’t take everything on an airplane, where there are 10 kg of hand luggage and 23 kg of luggage per person.
Arrangement
And again, relatives and their friends helped. Someone gave dishes, a table, chairs, a crib, a mattress on which they slept, and which at first lay right on the floor, someone gave a shelf, someone gave a sofa. Fortunately, apartments here are rented with a built-in kitchen, microwave, dishwasher, washing machine, dryer and refrigerator. Initially, from the world by thread, they acquired some belongings, and then they began to “hamster” so that when they moved to a rented house, they were tortured to carry things.
My daughter got a job right away, but not in her specialty, in a large chain clothing store part-time, her three-year-old son was sent to a kindergarten, for which there is a very large pay. The first time they had one car. The son-in-law worked during the day, and in the evening he drove his wife to work, and he sat with his son, and then loaded his son into the car and went to pick up his wife from work. A year later, they had a credit history in the bank, which allowed them to buy a second car. My daughter started working full-time as a warehouse manager in a store, but she did not want to associate her whole life with the store, and A master’s degree in philology also does little here. Therefore, she decided to retrain as an accountant and for this she went to college.
Well, here is somewhere such a backstory of their move. Now I asked my daughter: “Do you regret that you came here? There are so many efforts and difficulties”. To which she replied that they only regret that they could not come earlier and, probably, these forces would not be enough now. Of course, those who came here at the age of 21 – 25, and even with a big wallet, and even without children, and got children here, they were and are in a better position. And one more observation: if you leave, then you need to “cut the ends” completely in order to realize that the point of no return has been passed, and those who leave part of the business in Russia, and try to create part here, do not succeed either here or there. There are some friends here too.
Yes, I forgot to write about the language barrier. Despite the fact that my daughter knew English well at the university, and she and her husband studied a lot with a native speaker, it was still not easy at first to get used to communicating in another language on any topic. And it was especially difficult to talk on the phone. But this is their story.