I wanted to pass along a piece of advise about the interviews and investigators, who are the immigration officers. For the people who have their interviews this week, please really think about this.
When one is going through this process it is extremely important to disclose everything about your lives. It is extremely important to be an "open book" for this process. You need to be able to explain everything. Sometimes we hold things back because we are afraid of how it looks and how it's going to be perceived. When you do this investigators who are well trained sense something is out of place. They might feel you are being deceitful when really you're just afraid to tell them something that you think is big, when really it's small.
A good example of this would be. You fall in love and just before you get married your husband gets sick. You marry him and he loses his job because he can't work because of the medical appointments. You make the decision not to tell immigration he is sick because you are afraid of what they might think ie. free health coverage in Canada...
During the interview they speak about jobs and why he doesn't have one. The husband doesn't disclose that he was sick because of this fear. Trained investigators can sense when something is not right or when someone is not forthcoming with information. They are trained behaviourly to read people.
This is your life. Your situation is what it is. Don't try and change it or ignore it. Everything can be explained. Don't allow a worry to become the reason why you don't get the Visa.
Good luck to everyone this week.
Sandy
When one is going through this process it is extremely important to disclose everything about your lives. It is extremely important to be an "open book" for this process. You need to be able to explain everything. Sometimes we hold things back because we are afraid of how it looks and how it's going to be perceived. When you do this investigators who are well trained sense something is out of place. They might feel you are being deceitful when really you're just afraid to tell them something that you think is big, when really it's small.
A good example of this would be. You fall in love and just before you get married your husband gets sick. You marry him and he loses his job because he can't work because of the medical appointments. You make the decision not to tell immigration he is sick because you are afraid of what they might think ie. free health coverage in Canada...
During the interview they speak about jobs and why he doesn't have one. The husband doesn't disclose that he was sick because of this fear. Trained investigators can sense when something is not right or when someone is not forthcoming with information. They are trained behaviourly to read people.
This is your life. Your situation is what it is. Don't try and change it or ignore it. Everything can be explained. Don't allow a worry to become the reason why you don't get the Visa.
Good luck to everyone this week.
Sandy