The blood testing is something I object to, but apparently it's optional in CABA, as opposed to the province.
Getting married in Argentina when you've been divorced in another country.
There are 138 replies in this Thread which has previously been viewed 24,241 times. The latest Post () was by Rice.
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If that's so then it's surely a case of discrimination.
Not too sure what the blood test thing is all about in the first place. To see if you're carrying some contagious disease or just to record your blood group?
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If that's so then it's surely a case of discrimination.
Not too sure what the blood test thing is all about in the first place. To see if you're carrying some contagious disease or just to record your blood group?
To see if you are carrying a sexually transmissible disease and you could infect your partner. Nowadays it makes little sense because almost all couples have intercourse before marriage, but I guess nowadays it doesn’t make much sense.
The double ceremony - we have that in Italy, too. But only if you want a religious ceremony, after the civil one.
I skipped a step here because I should have informed the consulate about my intention to marry here. In Italy, by law the various town have to list publicly their inhabitants getting married to see if anybody objects (has a legal ground to object to the marriage).
They literally hang a slip of paper with the name of the bride and groom, their place of birth, date of birth etc.
this is done in all towns where you have been a resident in the last year I think.Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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If that's so then it's surely a case of discrimination.
Not too sure what the blood test thing is all about in the first place. To see if you're carrying some contagious disease or just to record your blood group?
It dates back to 1937 when venereal disease was very common in men and it was later made compulsory for women in 1965.
It's no longer compulsory in Chaco, San Juan, Santa Cruz, Salta, Mendoza, Santiago del Estero, Misiones y Tierra del Fuego, but still is in Buenos Aires.
CABA changed the rule in June 2018.
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A blood test for STD’s would seem less important than a dual personality test, to check for compatibility!
(My new favorite smilie)
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You mean a check up from the neck up?
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You mean a check up from the neck up?
Think I'll send the missus for one. She treats me like one of the dogs....''stay!!!''
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Heel!
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Heel!
I know my place.....even the dogs are better fed than me.
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I've been trying to train my husband to shut up for years.
Argentine are very chatty and they speak endlessly as long as they have an ear listening to them.
I don't know you, but my husband receives whatsapp voice messages which are SEVEN MINUTES long. What is it? A confessional of the Big Brother?
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I've been trying to train my husband to shut up for years.
Argentine are very chatty and they speak endlessly as long as they have an ear listening to them.
I don't know you, but my husband receives whatsapp voice messages which are SEVEN MINUTES long. What is it? A confessional of the Big Brother?
So true!
Makes me realise that maybe I don't talk all that much really
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So true!
Makes me realise that maybe I don't talk all that much really
I am often labeled as cold and selfish because I don't talk all the time.
But it is really a family thing. And I bore myself if I repeat myself continuously (because that is what people chatting non-stop do, in the end).
I was taking a long trip with my uncle, and after one hour or so I was trying to make some small talk, but we had a 5-hour drive ahead and he said 'We do not have to talk'.
Same scenario, with two Argentines heading toward Mar del Plata (6 hours drive): they did not stop talking for a second. And they were family who met regularly, so nothing much to talk about, imho.
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My 83 year old mother in law talks non stop.
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That's why I divorced my mother in law.
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That's why I divorced my mother in law.
Thankfully I only get to see mine once or twice a week,
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On the other hand, when some kind of polite conversation is called for (like mealtime??), people who don’t accept their obligation to contribute to the general discourse are just as rude as those who monopolize the conversation.
We had a relative whose idea of dinner conversation was “Please pass the salt.”
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The saga continues...
I asked my ex to contact the lawyer mentioned in my previous post, since she had never received an original either, which in my opinion was very characteristic of the unprofessional attitude of that particular lawyer.
Out of the blue, she received an email from his partner saying that he had located the original and yesterday he couriered it directly to my ex who is now sending it to my contact in Barcelona.
So we're back to Plan A, where the original can now be apostilled.
I'll update this as and when...
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This cautionary tale is the best argument I've heard, in favor of maintaining a civil relationship with an ex-spouse. What would you have done if she'd told you to take a hike and sort it out yourself?
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My other contact would have gone to the court for me as per the authorisation I signed.
But yes, it's good that we are on good terms.
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