WheatenLover
Senior Member
- Location
- Georgia
I moved to Mass to live with my cousin and my son. It took me awhile to adjust -- I am just now over that. I had to move because I could no longer afford to rent the house I was living in in PA.
I am not a resident of Mass. I am a visitor. I cannot get a Mass driver's license. I cannot register my car, etc. This because I cannot find my car's title, my birth certificate, or my passport. I brought all my files with me, and have looked through them twice - paper by paper. I have searched every unpacked box, every drawer, to no avail. I contacted my friend/landlord, and there are no files or paperwork in the house. I have searched my car, my purses, my coats.
It will take several months to get these documents replaced, especially since my birth certificate was issued by the State Department. I was born in a foreign country to an American father and a German mother.. I have been here for about 2 months, but hadn't decided whether I would stay here until now.
I cannot be a US citizen without a state of residency, so I am still a resident of PA. I renewed my driver's license there, and I changed my address to my husband's (and now he has been evicted), just because I need an address in PA. I cannot return to PA permanently right now, because I would have to live with my husband. I can change my address again to receive mail in PA. It would cause a huge problem if I changed my address to Mass because I would appear to be a resident of MA, even though I am not qualified to be one by Mass.
In a few weeks, my son will be moving back to CA. He will be living in an Airbnb with his brother. The rental housing situation in southern CA is just awful. (And because of that, my daughter will soon be moving to Pittsburgh.)
It is not my preference to stay here, but right now, I don't have a choice. I can visit for months, though. But it feels like I am doing something wrong because I am stuck here due to finances. I literally have no place to live if I return to PA.
What do you think about this, besides urging me to get replacement paperwork, which I have already applied for?
Can a person be a citizen living in the U.S. in a situation in which they are without a state to be a resident of? That doesn't work.
I am not a resident of Mass. I am a visitor. I cannot get a Mass driver's license. I cannot register my car, etc. This because I cannot find my car's title, my birth certificate, or my passport. I brought all my files with me, and have looked through them twice - paper by paper. I have searched every unpacked box, every drawer, to no avail. I contacted my friend/landlord, and there are no files or paperwork in the house. I have searched my car, my purses, my coats.
It will take several months to get these documents replaced, especially since my birth certificate was issued by the State Department. I was born in a foreign country to an American father and a German mother.. I have been here for about 2 months, but hadn't decided whether I would stay here until now.
I cannot be a US citizen without a state of residency, so I am still a resident of PA. I renewed my driver's license there, and I changed my address to my husband's (and now he has been evicted), just because I need an address in PA. I cannot return to PA permanently right now, because I would have to live with my husband. I can change my address again to receive mail in PA. It would cause a huge problem if I changed my address to Mass because I would appear to be a resident of MA, even though I am not qualified to be one by Mass.
In a few weeks, my son will be moving back to CA. He will be living in an Airbnb with his brother. The rental housing situation in southern CA is just awful. (And because of that, my daughter will soon be moving to Pittsburgh.)
It is not my preference to stay here, but right now, I don't have a choice. I can visit for months, though. But it feels like I am doing something wrong because I am stuck here due to finances. I literally have no place to live if I return to PA.
What do you think about this, besides urging me to get replacement paperwork, which I have already applied for?
Can a person be a citizen living in the U.S. in a situation in which they are without a state to be a resident of? That doesn't work.