Sor Reader -
Since "SOR" could mean a few different things (e.g., in immigration law, Special Operation Report in military/police contexts, or School of Rock in fandom), I’ve written a general, immersive character study of a reader analyzing a formal "Statement of Reasons" document—a common, high-stakes bureaucratic SOR.
She’s been at this desk for eleven years. Immigration. Appeals. The gray zone between law and mercy. She knows the weight of a single sheet. It can hold a life or end one. sor reader
She sets the pen down. Presses her palm flat on the page. For a moment, she tries to feel what the applicant felt: the knock at 3 a.m., the burned village, the child who didn’t make it to the border. She can’t. The paper is smooth. The ink is dry. The air in this windowless room is 72 degrees and recirculated. Since "SOR" could mean a few different things (e
She wants to write a margin note. Would you remember the Tuesday? But she doesn’t. The file will be reviewed. Her notes become evidence. So she writes only: See psychological impact of PTSD on temporal recall. She knows no one will look it up. Appeals
She reads that line three times. She knows what it really means: The applicant was asked to remember a trauma, in a language not their own, without a lawyer, six months after surviving something that should have killed them. And they got the Tuesday wrong.
It sounds like you're asking for a
"Country conditions reports indicate no pattern of systemic violence against the applicant’s ethnic group."