Weddings Part II
Attending a wedding is like being handed a licence to act like a twat. Oh how I laughed when I sobered up and realised I'd nicked most of the plates and cutlery from the posh hotel lunch and those vague memories of stealthily exiting like a cat-burglar had in fact involved falling out of the hotel, knives and forks clattering onto the steps.
Tell us more of your wedding stories.
( , Mon 3 Nov 2014, 18:10)
Attending a wedding is like being handed a licence to act like a twat. Oh how I laughed when I sobered up and realised I'd nicked most of the plates and cutlery from the posh hotel lunch and those vague memories of stealthily exiting like a cat-burglar had in fact involved falling out of the hotel, knives and forks clattering onto the steps.
Tell us more of your wedding stories.
( , Mon 3 Nov 2014, 18:10)
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You have to go through some registration process to have it recognised
at least in order to renew a passport, anyway.
( , Mon 10 Nov 2014, 11:23, 1 reply)
at least in order to renew a passport, anyway.
( , Mon 10 Nov 2014, 11:23, 1 reply)
I think that works both ways.
Not sure what exactly the issue was, but my Brazilian wife had some extra hoops to jump through to get her resident visa, that she wouldn't have had to do if we had been married in the UK.
It definitely isn't a straight swap, although as far as rights to property / kids etc work, civil law would trump any lack of paperwork anyway.
( , Mon 10 Nov 2014, 11:39, closed)
Not sure what exactly the issue was, but my Brazilian wife had some extra hoops to jump through to get her resident visa, that she wouldn't have had to do if we had been married in the UK.
It definitely isn't a straight swap, although as far as rights to property / kids etc work, civil law would trump any lack of paperwork anyway.
( , Mon 10 Nov 2014, 11:39, closed)
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