
I still don’t know what these little biscuit things are called but I used to eat them all the time when I was little. The dried up wrinkly things are assamboi (sour-salty dried plum things) and pickled green mangoes. So, instead of blabbing on about how stressed I am, here are photos from our recent (food-oriented) Malaysian holiday!Ī couple of photos at dusk from Perhentian Besar. I’m a little too stressed out to blog properly at the moment as we’re in the middle of yet another move! This time to the UK! Well, theoretically to the UK as I’m still waiting for my visa and we’re due to leave in a couple of days! So anyone who’s tired of living in France because of all the red tape blah blah blah, don’t even think about moving across La Manche! The people are still talking a whole other language here!įirst of all, I’m a day early but Happy Merdeka day to all the Malaysians out there! Oh, and then the English bank man tells us that when we come back in to open the joint account, we should allow at least 45 minutes per person. Then English bank man says that I really should change my maiden name to my married name. English bank man says: no job, no name on account. So Hubs explains that we’re married so his income is my income.


Hubs on the other hand, can open an account because he has a job. And secondly, I don’t have a job so I can’t even put my first name on that joint account. So off we went to the bank.Įnglish bank man says that firstly, I can’t have my maiden name on the joint account, it has to be my married name. Hubs is employed, I’m not (I've been here 1 week!), and I still have my maiden name. I just got hyphenated but we had our joint account in less than 30 minutes.Īcross La Manche, same situation. In the end, she compromised, and my surname on our joint account was “maidenname-marriedname”. This was obviously a problem for me as all my ID has my maiden name on it.įrench bank lady even told me that I should change my name immediately! She even got quite huffy about the whole situation. The French bank lady said that she couldn’t put my maiden name on the joint account as I was married. We went to the bank and wanted to open a joint account. In France, when I first arrived, the Hubs had a job but I didn’t. I don’t have anything against changing my surname I’m just too lazy to do all the paperwork. Part of all this chagrin is me keeping my maiden name and not officially changing my surname to Hubs’ surname the very second I got married. Hawaii, Alaska, Puerto Rico, US Virgin Islands, & Guam ship via USPS/US Mail.ĪPO, FPO, and DPO addresses are only shipped Priority Mail.ĬLICK HERE for more information on shipping.ĬLICK HERE for international shipping details.I never thought I’d ever hear myself say this but I miss France!Įverything almost seems easy in France compared to England! Yes, yes, I can hear all you French expats muttering that I’ve been drinking too many cups of tea without milk over here but let me give you one example that probably says it all for me. No PO BOX addresses for expedited shipping. The Cost is calculated in your shopping cart starting at $19.95. The Cost is calculated in your shopping cart starting at $12.95.

We ship UPS SurePost, UPS, or USPS for our economy option - We can ship to a PO BOX.Ģ-Standard 3-10 business days $7.95 We ship UPS SurePost, UPS, or USPS for our economy option - We can ship to a PO BOX.ģ-Priority 2-3 business days by 2 pm EST- is a UPS shipping method that is a 2-3 business day service. Yandy offers the following shipping methods - orders must be placed before 2 pm ESTġ-Economy 3-10 business days - FREE if you spend over $80 - you must spend more than $80, pre-tax including any discounts applied to your cart. Delivery dates and exact costs calculated in your cart, prior to checkout. Yandy offers shipping methods within the US.
