I got my two apostilled copies of my diplomas, double-stapled onto the diploma copies, with gold seals on the apostilles. I'm still astonished that Monument Visa was able to obtain the apostilles without the original diplomas, but according to their staffers, almost nobody sends originals anymore—just scanned copies—and Monument emailed that they were very happy with the quality of my diploma scans. Still, they're going to wait to send me everything back only after they've received my FBI document and had it apostilled.
On other fronts:
- Sookmyung only just replied a few minutes ago, but it was simply to acknowledge receipt of my document. The email then asked me to understand slowness in future response because of the upcoming university Foundation Day celebrations and holidays (the Buddha's birthday), so any reply will come later next week. At this point, I'm ready to take a flamethrower to that office. They are stalling and stonewalling hard. Fuckers.
- My Korean ex-coworker will be sending his letter of recommendation sometime next week. He asked to see a sample recommendation letter on which to model his.
- I have no idea when the FBI criminal background check is coming. Soon, I hope.
- I will probably meet my boss next week and get his recommendation letter then.
- I looked up how long it takes to recover from polyp removal after a colonoscopy. Looks to be a couple of weeks for bigger polyps. I might be on a liquid diet for a while. With the colonoscopy, the problem is timing. I was warned that, from scheduling to the procedure, a lot of time can pass. I hope I'm not riddled with ass cancer. Not seeing any bloody stool or other telltale signs, but one never knows.
Now, I know what an apostille looks like.




Recently had a colonoscopy done (in the US) and it wasn't as bad as I thought. Prep was moderately uncomfortable, but mainly because of the sheer amount of water I had to drink mixed with the prep solution. Schedule it as early as you can in the morning, as I spent most of the previous night being friendly with the toilet as I got the pipes clean and got almost no sleep.
ReplyDeleteProcedure itself was a breeze. Start the IV, I fell asleep, and the next thing I remember was waking up in recovery. Don't know what it is like in Korea, but in the US, they require you go to the procedure with someone so that they can make sure you get safely home.
Brian