One Hurdle down...

...many to go.

The overseas screening is done. Even though the appointment was far away, during nap times, and ended up being a long appointment, the boys did very well.

Hopefully it won't take long for our orders to be cut so there will be a lot more to blog about!

Overseas screening

Well the date is set and all pre-requisites have been met. We will have our overseas screening on March 29th which will pretty much get the ball rolling on everything else. Yay!

Pre-requisites

And thus it begins...

I vowed not to get too frustrated with the process ahead of us, but they're making it really hard. So, as we understand it right now, they won't cut paper orders until we have our overseas screenings done. So I called the clinic to set up an appointment for our overseas screening and they told me I needed to first come in and get some paperwork. I sent Dan in to pick it up, and duh, it's a navy clinic and since we really are in the army (even though we've only ever worked on a navy base) we have to do all medical stuff through the army bases.

So while we were at Ft. Monroe filling out our passport applications we picked up the proper paperwork to do our overseas screening... that same form that had already been given to us. So step 1 was unnecessarily repeated. They gave us the phone number to call to get the overseas screening done and I get her voicemail. It says, if you need to schedule an overseas screening please have the following things done first. Have DA form 5888 signed and dated (check, and double check), and must have had a physical within the past year (oops.... i haven't had one since 6 weeks after alex was born).

So next step, schedule a physical for myself. But what kind of physical? No one knows. Is it a general run of the mill physical or a girly one? So I call to make my appointment and they can't see me until March 30th!? That's crazy talk. So I called the clinic directly and they said, "Oh! We can see you today at 1:45!"

So I'll be out the door today, not 3 weeks from now, to get a general physical, which may lead to a girly physical, to get our overseas screening, so we can get our orders which will open up the flood gates for even more wonderful experiences like this one! :)

GO MILITARY

Dan received a massively long email full of websites, form numbers, phone numbers and jargon that is obviously stuff we need to know for our upcoming move overseas. However, the email is in ALL CAPS with so many spacing errors that it is hard to read. I will now spend the next hour or so poring over it, deciphering, and rewriting the information so I don't have to refer to this awfully written email whenever I need a phone number!

Here's a small example:
THAILAND, VIETNAM, AND JAPAN. KOREAN CULTURE. A FASCINATING COUNTRY, KOREA IS A SPECTACULAR MIX OF ANCIENT TRADITION AND SUPER MODERN ARCHITECTURE AND INFRAST RUCTURE. THE KOREAN PEOPLE ARE WONDERFUL HOSTS AND THEY ARE TREMENDOUS SUPPORT ERS OF THE US MILITARY. WHILE SERVING IN KOREA YOU WILL HAVE THE UNIQUE OPPORTU NITY TO EXPERIENCE THIS ANCIENT AND TRADITIONAL CULTURE, LEARN ABOUT THEIR TRAD ITIONS, AND EAT SOME GREAT KOREAN FOOD. TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM/SUBWAYS. THE MA SS TRANSIT SYSTEM IN KOREA IS ONE OF THE BEST IN THE WORLD. FOR EXAMPLE, SEOUL SUBWAY LINES 1~4 REACHES A COMBINED 5 TRILLION KM

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Our family

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What time is it in Korea?

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