The thing about the Canadian PR is that it's very generous -- 2/5 years in the country, nothing more. It's the reason why my wife and I immigrated to Canada instead of having her apply for a green card in the United States (6 months out = green card gone). Your daughter has a lot of time to figure out what she wants to do.
I'd forgotten about the nuisance of Germany's citizenship policy, what you did makes sense.
The second thing about growing up is that we're always taught that it's good to finish things -- this is awful advice for adults, though. You should finish things you want to do, and quit things you don't want to do. Life is too short to do the opposite. If you daughter dreams of being an interior designer in BC, it's a little bit of a push to make her into a paralegal office assistant in Germany . . . It sounds as if your move back to Germany was a bit spur-of-the-moment; perhaps this is a good opportunity for your daughter to sit down and make a careful plan, which doesn't have to be executed immediately, for what she wants to do in her next few years and how that might involve Canada and Germany both. And it might be that her apprenticeship contains things she can apply later, even if unfinished.
I know how she feels (without the family issues) -- I went to college for four years in Canada as a young adult, and it was kind of strange and unpleasant, when that was over, to think that suddenly I had no status in Canada, no ability to work there, and I was finished with the place. All my friends were up there, as well as my very short adult life, and that was it.
I'd forgotten about the nuisance of Germany's citizenship policy, what you did makes sense.
The second thing about growing up is that we're always taught that it's good to finish things -- this is awful advice for adults, though. You should finish things you want to do, and quit things you don't want to do. Life is too short to do the opposite. If you daughter dreams of being an interior designer in BC, it's a little bit of a push to make her into a paralegal office assistant in Germany . . . It sounds as if your move back to Germany was a bit spur-of-the-moment; perhaps this is a good opportunity for your daughter to sit down and make a careful plan, which doesn't have to be executed immediately, for what she wants to do in her next few years and how that might involve Canada and Germany both. And it might be that her apprenticeship contains things she can apply later, even if unfinished.
I know how she feels (without the family issues) -- I went to college for four years in Canada as a young adult, and it was kind of strange and unpleasant, when that was over, to think that suddenly I had no status in Canada, no ability to work there, and I was finished with the place. All my friends were up there, as well as my very short adult life, and that was it.