About

A friend once sent me a photo from a corridor with flickering lights: a numbered slip, two stamps, and the message “Does this mean I’m in?” That was my cue to start digging. I didn’t work on HOPES–Madad, but people close to me did well because of it, and I got used to being the person who reads the small print, phones the office that never updates its website, and writes the useful bit down.

This blog is what I do with that habit. Small pieces, checked as best I can, written by someone who likes research and hates sending people in circles. I pick one knot and untangle it: how to prepare for a short counselling chat so you leave with one clear action; where recognition rules usually hide online and how to read them without guessing; what to carry so you don’t lose half a morning to a missing copy. If a rule or deadline matters, I link to the official page and get out of the way. I’m not authority. I’m the after-dinner researcher with a notebook and too many tabs open.

What you’ll get isn’t theory. Each post tries to land one move you can copy this week. A way to ask a question so it doesn’t drift (“Could you confirm if this certificate meets the entry requirement for the next intake?”). A subject line that gets opened (“Recognition query — [title name]”). Which desk to try first, and what to say second if the first answer is “no.” It’s the last mile between rules on a page and a person at a counter.

I keep people safe. Names change. Places blur. Outcomes stay honest. Sometimes I blend a few similar stories into one so nobody is exposed; if I do, I’ll say so. If I’m wrong, I’ll fix it in the post so you can see the correction.

The personal half is just my life around all this. I live on Spain’s Costa Blanca. I married an Englishman who came for a week and never booked the return. We have two kids, two school apps, and a family calendar that breeds. My day job is unrelated, so this site gets made in the edges: the car outside the sports hall while futsal runs late, a bench near the playground when there’s a rare five quiet minutes, the kitchen table after the dishwasher beeps. I keep a stubby IKEA pencil in my bag because pens vanish in public offices. Also a two-euro coin taped inside the notebook for the copier in our Ayuntamiento that refuses cards. Press “Reset” first or it eats the money. Ask me how I know.

How I research is not glamorous. I read the official line, ring the number on the second page, and check if the rule changed last Tuesday. I compare three versions of the same form and look for the box everyone forgets to tick. When I’m unsure, I write what I can stand behind and mark the rest clearly so you don’t waste time.

If you arrived looking for a full guide, I’ll point you to the best one I can find. Come back here for the lived part underneath. Read what helps, ignore what doesn’t, and if something’s out of date, tell me. I’ll fix it and thank you.

HOPES-Madad.org desk iamge