How I Got My Visa Extended

It’s 7:20 in the morning. As I leave the U-Bahn station at Poccistrasse, I see a crowd of other sleepy-eyed foreigners standing outside the Kreisverwaltungsreferat (the KVR). Presumably, everyone on line is here to obtain or extend a visa, but the KVR may offer other services, so I’m not sure. An old man in front of me with hedges for eyebrows stares at a newspaper with his mouth open for who knows how many minutes. He likely won’t be joining me in the student line. A girl about my age is further up, at the very front of the line. She’s leaning inward toward the door slightly, and she’s tracing the items on her checklist with her finger, head positioned nearly below her shoulders. I imagine she’s a runner and that she’ll be my competition for a place in line.

Ten minutes go by. I can hear anxious murmuring ahead of me as the crowd ball starts to shift. Someone somewhere is unlocking a door.

It’s the handicapped door, at the far end of the entrance. An anxious young guy edges past me in order to weave through the crowd toward it. Waiting for the door in front of us to open is for noobs, I guess. A second later, a KVR employee is unlocking our door. The murmuring starts in our section of the crowd, and I feel pressure on my back. The KVR employee slides out of the way of the door, and I learn that everyone is a runner. It’s November 19, 2006 in the US, and the Nintendo Wii just went on sale.

I walk in, dodging runners as they fly by me on their way to whichever line offers the visa they need. I’m on my way to the 2nd floor, but luckily it’s pretty close to the stairwell. Everyone seems to be avoiding that route, so I’m feeling pretty good about the likely length of my line. Nursing the pending nervous breakdown I’d given shelter in my stomach over the weekend, I push open the stairwell doors. I hear sharp breathing as a girl of maybe 26 hurries past me as I inadvertently hold the door open for her. You’re welcome. I enjoy a laugh at the ridiculousness of everyone’s anxiety and continue upward.

About a minute later, I’m in line behind 6 people. This isn’t bad at all–the line ends before the doorway out of the room. I have 4.5 hours to get through this, and maybe 3 waiting areas. Awesome. A crowd of maybe 7 runners sighs its way into line behind me. That’s funny.

Four people make it through the front desk in about as many seconds, after simply handing Desk Lady their application checklist. How on Earth did they do that? There’s no time to ask, though–I’m almost next.

The next guy approaches Desk Lady. His native language is Spanish, but he stutters through some German. Maybe it’s because he’s still learning, or maybe it’s because he’s nervous. I don’t know which it is, but I absolutely relate to both.

“I need to get a Visa, please.”

“Do you have your application?” Desk Lady tells her computer screen.

“Um, no I don’t.”

“Why not?” She still hasn’t looked up from her screen.

“Um. Well, can I go fill it out and bring it back to you?”

“Go fill it out. Next.”

He’s a tough act to follow. “Hi, I would like an extension for my Visa, please.”

“I need to see your documents.”

“Naturally.” I’m trying to be as humble as possible. In my experience, working with Desk Lady and Desk Man is working with an emotionally sensitive computer. Every text string that leaves my mouth or appears on any of my papers must match the string stored in their memory. Unless I annoy them. In that case, they add new text strings to their memory and penalize me for an invalid command.

I produce my Visa application and my checklist.

“Financial support?” She wants evidence that I won’t be a burden on the German welfare system.

“Yep.” I hand her a pay stub of Roxana’s and a note signed by Roxana naming her my source of financial support.

“This is all you have?”

That is the question of nightmares. Every bit of that nervous breakdown I mentioned before was rooted in the possibility of hearing that exact question. Oh, dear God.

“Well, yes. It indicates that my time here is sustainable, no?”

“Who is Roxana?”

“She’s my girlfriend.”

“She needs to come here with you. Notes like this only work when support comes from your parents.”

My argument: “Oh. Really?”

She looks back at her computer screen and types for ten seconds. She looks back to me. After five more seconds, she slides her chair back, hits a button and hands me a waiting room ticket.

Valid command!

I’m number 108, so I find a seat in the waiting room and melt into it. This is as far as I’ve made it since I received my first Visa a year ago. Run free, pending nervous breakdown.

It’s going to be awhile until they call me. One new number appears on the board every 7-10 minutes. I pull out A Feast for Crows and start reading. George R.R. Martin is your best friend in a government waiting room. Cersei’s angry.

1.5 hours go by, and my number finally appears on the board. I’m ecstatic. It’s the moment of truth. Time to meet with Office Lady.

I open her door, and I’m greeted by a smile sitting in front of a view of the courtyard. Office Lady is always nicer than Desk Lady.

“Good morning!” I say, as humbly as ever.

“Good morning!” she replies. “How can I help you?”

“Well, I’m wondering if it would be okay if we speak in English? I can speak German, but my vocabulary on the subject of Visas and the law is really small.”

She smiles, looking a bit unsure. “Yes, I can try.”

“Thank you so much. I’m applying to graduate school, here, and in order to finish the process I need to extend my Visa. Specifically, I’m looking for one called Section 16, paragraph 1-”

“Slow down, slow down. I need to see your documents, first.”

That’s interesting. Desk Lady would have wanted me to spell out the exact nature of my request. Office Lady is ready to decide on her own what they can offer me. I always liked Office Lady. I hand her all of my documents.

“And do you have proof of eligibility for University?”

I’m glad you asked! Is what I want to say. Instead, I say “Yes, I do. I have 4 types, in case you prefer any one of them.”

I show her my grad school application, my original diplomas from UT Austin, my official sealed transcript from UT Austin, and my grad school acceptance letter from last year (the University accepted me, but the specific program to which I applied rejected me). One of them is bound to convince her that I’m eligible for a Master’s degree here.

“I think the diplomas are sufficient,” Office Lady laughs. “Please wait outside for a few minutes while I process these. I’ll come get you when I’m done.”

I wait in the hallway for 40 minutes. I still feel good about Office Lady, though.

Finally, her door opens and she pokes her head through the doorway. “You can come back, now.”

“I was able to extend your visa. Before this extension expires, though, you have to bring proof that you were accepted into your Master’s program back here. Then, we will give you a normal student visa.”

It’s okay, Office Lady. I am more than familiar with the drill. “That’s perfect,” I say as she asks me to sign the document that confirms the details of the extension. It’s in German legalese, but I can make out an effective period of six months, and a line that says failure means leaving Germany.

“Just to make sure: this says that I have six months to bring back proof of enrollment. Right? So, by October?”

“Well, yes. Actually you have until September 30.”

Fantastic. “Thanks so much for your help!”

“It’s no problem. Have a good day.”

Office Lady is great.

The rest is easy. All I have to do is make my way downstairs and pay for this thing. 20 euros and 2.5 hours, and I’m done.

********

It’s noon, and I decide I want to examine my new Visa up close. It’s different than what I received last time–a sticker stuck to a rectangular stub rather than inside my passport. It’s also called a “Reisepass” this time, instead of an “Aufenthaltserlaubnis.” That’s strange.

And then: “Valid until: June 30, 2014.” Holy nuts. Cashier Lady did not just do that.

So, I’m going back to the KVR tomorrow morning to correct this mistake. I love the KVR.

Staying in Germany for Noobs

Renewing my visa is just about finished. That “just about” part is what makes the story worth telling, by the way.

I’ve been here for a year. Specifically, my language student visa expires next Saturday, April 5. I’m applying to grad school, so there’s a problem with that. Namely, I can’t finish the application process in the United States. What I’m doing, then, is applying for a Student Application Visa. It’s a visa that gives you 9 months to get accepted into a university while living in Germany. Once you’re accepted, you can show the acceptance letter to the Kreisverwaltungsreferat (the KVR), and they upgrade you to a 3-year Student Visa. Or, it’s a 2-year visa with the automatic option to extend it a year at the end in order to find a job. I forget how that one works.

I went in two weeks ago with all of my materials in hand, ready to get that visa. If you’re from the US or one of a group of other countries, then the process is simple. Last time, for example, I was given my visa before I left the building. But, as is usual with the KVR, you never just have to go one time. You’re always missing a document, or a document is missing one critical detail, or you arrived 1 minute too late and they stopped giving out waiting room tickets because the office is only open 5 hours a day. Last time, my problem was that I didn’t have confirmation that I was admitted to the university. It was the beginning of March, so my brain exploded from each of my ears.

How can I get confirmation of acceptance, when the application process doesn’t end until May 31? Well, after the representatives behind the counter spoke among themselves in >B2 level German, they told me that I can bring proof that I’m eligible to attend the university, and that would suffice. The confusion alone was enough to baffle me–I had said that I wanted to extend my visa in order to complete the application process. There is a visa for exactly that purpose. Why were they acting like I was asking for a full student visa this early?

In any case, I resigned to the obligatory first-visit failure and went home to wrap up my application and get confirmation from the university that I applied.

Two weeks later, and I’m done with all of that stuff. I’ve finished my admissions research paper (“The Role of Consumer Information in Public Policy”), obtained written confirmations for every item on my CV (yeah, you have to do that, here), and did battle with the insurance industry in order to get coverage for an adequate amount of time (more on that in a future post). This morning, I had my application documents in hand and a pending nervous breakdown in limbic system. The KVR is open on Friday from 7:30am until noon. I was set to arrive at the end of the inevitable line by 9am. Surely, 3 hours is plenty of time, especially considering that all of my requirements accompanied me, in order of necessity, in the most German folder I’ve ever assembled.

It wasn’t enough time. I was on line for 1.5 hours. At 10:30, I reached the counter, showed one representative my materials, and watched as she became 3 representatives. They discussed puzzlement over my lack of university acceptance, again, but eventually relented when I showed them the checklist given to me last time (which specifically left that bit out as a requirement). Finally, a member of the team told me that, unfortunately, the cutoff for handing out waiting room numbers had just passed. I would sadly need to come back on Monday.

“I have everything I need, right?” I asked. They will not send me home, again, on Monday.

“Exactly. You have everything. You’ve just come too late, today and need to come back on Monday.”

So now, I just have to wait three days and coddle this pending nervous breakdown. What are you supposed to feed these things, anyway?

Wow, That Was Pretty Easy

Germany gave me a Visa, today. I haven’t reached my ultimate goal, yet, but this Visa is valid until April of 2014. So, this is definitely a valuable step en route to my ultimate goal.

It’s a Language Student Visa. Obviously, it allows me to stay here while I learn German and complete my metamorphosis into a pork-eating, beer-drinking, symmetry-loving, no-shoes-in-the-house deutschmann. If I’m admitted into LMU’s Master program, then I’ll be upgraded to a Student Visa and granted permission to stay here until October 2015. If we stay in Germany after that, I’ll use my new education and German fluency to find a job and obtain a Residence Permit for Work. For now, though, I have a Language Student Visa until April 2014. So let’s focus on that.

Shocking to me was how easy and fast it was to get this Visa. Well, it’s not necessarily easy to get a visa in Germany. What I can say more certainly is that it’s easy for a U.S. citizen to get a visa in Germany. The U.S. is a member of a group of countries whose citizens don’t need visas before entering Germany. We get 90 days for free, during which we can mess around with the visa requirements and apply while we’re here. I’m definitely going to come up with some theories about why these countries are on the list (unless I find an actual fact about it first), but not now. If you’re curious, here are the other countries:

  1. Andorra
  2. Australia
  3. Brazil
  4. El Salvador
  5. Honduras
  6. Israel
  7. Japan
  8. Canada
  9. Monaco
  10. New Zealand
  11. San Marino
  12. South Korea

Without knowing at all what I’m talking about, I’ll hypothesize that the motivations behind that list are talent attraction, humanitarianism (refuge), and political negotiation. Now, let’s hop off this tangent and get back to how getting this visa was easy. First, here’s a list of my requirements:

  1. Passport
  2. Passport photo
  3. Proof of German Health Insurance
  4. Proof of enrollment in a language school
  5. Proof that I won’t be broke before my visa expires

I started applying for this visa about two weeks ago, 70 days after I got here. Since I had 90 days to obtain a visa, that puts my procrastination factor at .78. I received my visa today, 94% of my way to the deadline, immediately after I submitted my application for it. So, why didn’t I receive the visa back at the 78% point? Two reasons:

  1. The “Student Application Visa” is a phantom tip
  2. Mother F#@$*& Heatlh Insurance

I asked for a Student Application Visa, hoping it would give me time to apply to LMU. After Desk Lady’s head exploded, she said that what is possible is a Language Student visa. All I need to do is get a note from the language school that confirms that I’m enrolled. Oh, okay.

Oh, and there’s a problem with my health insurance. I took out a policy with Techniker Krankenhaus–a popular public firm that caters to students and employed people. They arranged for my policy to activate when I begin the Master’s program. In October. “What will cover you between now and October?” asked Desk Lady.

“Dammit,” I replied.

So, I went home and learned a little about some of the private companies here who offer short-term policies. These are really just red-tape policies, right? I can manage safety for three months, I think. So, I don’t care what they offer, as long as Germany considers them legitimate and they are inexpensive. I “applied” with a company called…something to do with “care.” Don’t ask me.

Within hours of “applying,” I received my policy in pdf form. That was two days ago. And today I have a visa.

What the Last 30 Days is Like

You may already know that U.S. citizens (and those of some other countries) can live in Germany for 90 days without any type of visa before the country gives them a 3-month timeout (they make you leave the EU for 3 months). The last of my 90 days is July 4th, and I don’t want to sit in timeout, so June is really busy.

I’ve finished my first major task: deciding which visa I need. Mostly, I accomplished that with individual research. Funnily enough, asking people for advice about getting a visa is almost completely fruitless. Many people I’ve met are here for work, so all they know is that someone in a suit cut some red tape for them and now they’re living in Germany. Others had to endure really strict immigration processes that required them to have a visa before they even set foot in the country. And others just spread random second-hand fantasies and phantom tips.

“I know a guy…”

[He probably doesn’t know a guy]

“…who just told the government…”

[Sure. I’d love to meet Mr. Government if he’s ever available.]

“…that he’s a freelancer. So they just gave him something called a ‘Freelancer Visa,’ and now he can stay here!”

[They didn’t ‘just give him’ one. One of the bundle of requirements of a ‘Freelancer Visa’ is that you prove that you’ve been contracted for 3 projects at the time you apply for it.]

Many of the second-hand tips are like that one. They begin with “Have you heard of a [X] Visa?” Then, they make it sound like the German government is just giving them away to people with faces. Those tips are problems, because they can make you think that getting a visa is easy or worse, quick, and that you can wait a little while before you start applying for one.

So I’ve relied mostly on the Internet for my research. Forgetting about travelers’ blogs, because they really just offer more phantom tips, I set my sights on government resources. First, Google led me to the US Embassy’s residence permit tips. They give really general advice–gems like “yeah, you need a permit after 90 days,” and “go talk to the Germans if you really want to know the requirements for a visa.” Nice. Germany’s official resources aren’t any better. They offer super lists (read: comprehensive lists) which, if followed, could get anyone in the world into Germany. I know that some of those requirements don’t apply to me, so I had to keep looking. Finally, I found the best resource at the University of Munich’s website.

Anyway, the visa upon which I’ve decided is called a “Student Application Visa.” It gives me three extra months to apply to a university. Then, once I’m accepted, it becomes a normal student visa that allows me to live in Germany for the duration of my time with the school.

My plan to remain in Germany relies on my accomplishing three things in the next 20 or so days: obtain a student application visa, get into an LMU Master’s program, and book the next 6-8 months of German courses.

1. Obtain a Student Application Visa

I’ll be getting this one going tomorrow morning at 7am, across town, since “early morning” and “across town” are parts of a universal phenomenon that determines how we work with governments. Mostly, this is about filling out easy forms and showing my passport to people who glare at me. But, I just learned that I need German health insurance before I can get a visa, here. So far, getting insured sounds easy and cheap (EURO 50 per month is what I keep hearing). I’m wary, though, since that could just be a phantom tip.

2. Get Into an LMU Master’s Program

I’ve always known I would eventually go back for more education. Academia is just so tasty and theoretical that a second round needs to happen in the middle of my career to prevent mental atrophy. Now is a good time–I’m in another country, I don’t have to leave a job to make it happen, the local university is really good, and they offer a really interesting program–so I’m going for it.

Coming from the undergrad business world, I certainly considered the MBA. But, I mostly floated back and forth between “maybe” and “no,” never actually breaching the positive end of the argument. As I read and asked people about getting an MBA, I always encountered the same pros (not always all at once, but I never encountered other pros). They are 1) the letters “MBA” on your resume, 2) personal connections and 3) return on investment stemming from 1 and 2. While those three are no doubt useful benefits, they are not benefits I need from my education. Well, I admit that ROI is a factor I need to consider, but I think I have a pretty low threshold for “acceptable ROI,” and ROI is a weak factor for any program above that threshold.

As I researched the universities near and in Munich, I tossed around Economics and Psychology, believing they could make me a better marketer and, one day, an awesome marketing leader. At once, though, I noticed a strange-sounding Master’s program at the bottom of LMU’s English-taught programs list: Logic and the Philosophy of Science. I had to investigate; it sounded like a program  rooted in questioning the ability of science to deliver Truth. God, that’s tasty.

It turns out that’s, in large part, what it is. The program’s informative resources previewed its subject areas.

  1. Philosophical Logic
  2. General Philosophy of Science
  3. Philosophy of the Special Sciences: eg “Philosophy of the Social Sciences”
  4. Philosophy of Logic and Mathematics: What is the role of logic in thought and reasoning?
  5. Rational Choice and Formal Epistemology: eg Formal Rationality Concepts in Decision Theory and Social Choice Theory
  6. Analytic Philosophy: eg “Philosophy of Language” and “Philosophy of Probability”

GOD, that is tasty.

If I am accepted, I’ll use what I learn from the program to develop ideas and perspectives related to conducting market research, analyzing marketing data, employing appeals to marketing audiences and markets, and evaluating different marketing plans before launch, when there are more than one option.

In short, I’ll use the program to be a better specialist in the short term, and an awesome leader in the long term.

3. Book the Next 6-8 Months of German Courses

6 more months will get me through B2 level (I just finished A1, and the last possible level is C2). That’s where many tell me I should stop, since it’s where the practical German ends (for instance, future tense starts in C1, but nobody uses future tense, here). 8 months gets me through C1. That’s where I want to stop, since I want to be able to be clever. Even teachers say C2 isn’t worth it unless you’re a linguist, so I’ll trust them on that one.

I studied A1 at Tandem Munich. 1 unit (2 months) costs 1,090 Euros there. I will be studying A2 and probably all of the rest at the Muenchner Volkshochschule. One unit (2 months) costs 460 Euros. From what I can tell, the secret behind the price difference is that the German government subsidizes the VHS. It’s nice to know that life still involves some easy decisions.

Anyway, this is the easiest step. Every few weeks, I go to the VHS and enroll in a new German course (courses aren’t available much further than 2 months ahead of time). The challenge is dedicating myself to going to Rosenheimerplatz once a week to make sure the classes don’t fill up before I can enroll. It’s insane how quickly VHS classes reach capacity.

Well, that’s it.

Without spending much time on the sign off, I’ll just say that I hope all of this works out. Wish me luck.