success2016 said:
In the last 6 years I have moved 3 times and I didn't keep any records so I don't remember exactly what days I moved. So what can I do in this case?
How to approach this situation depends in part on how well you can reconstruct the information, how accurate and precise and complete. An approximate day, rather than the exact day is probably OK, so long as the month is correct. All months need to be covered (leave no gaps).
"I don't remember" tends to not work.
PR applicants typically have to reconstruct ten years back. When I applied for PR, I had to report all addresses and employment since I was 18 years old: that meant going back
more than four decades (yeah, I'm an old man). For some places, going back three decades or so, I could only describe locations, not precise address, but notwithstanding having lived in scores of different places it was not that difficult to reconstruct.
Since you were required to timely give notice to Provincial health care provider of any change in address, assuming you did this you may be able to get your records from them and use that to help you reconstruct addresses and dates. If you did not, if your provincial records are not going to be consistent with your actual places of abode, you might want to consider the alternative I describe below . . . which is to wait to apply when you have your information, accurate and complete, for the requisite period of time.
If there is a month or more you really cannot positively, accurately state where you were living, at the least you should acknowledge this on a separate page and explain as best you can. But of course this could lead to questions, doubts, RQ or such.
The other alternative, the one I alluded to above and one to actually consider if you really do have a problem reconstructing addresses and dates for more than an isolated month here or there, is to reconstruct as much as you can, going back as far as you are sure you can be accurate, and then consider waiting to apply six years from that date -- that is wait to apply when you will be able to positively state all addresses and employment and so on for the required period of time. While that may seem like a long wait, it could be shortened to five years when Bill C-6 is adopted, and overall a solid case will more likely sail smoothly to a quick oath whereas a case with holes in the information, let alone proof, could get bogged down as a residency case and take a lot, lot longer. Sometimes waiting is faster (really -- look at topics where applicants are still waiting for citizenship after applying in 2011 or 2012, more than a few in 2013).
In the meantime, welcome to the modern world in which adults are expected to keep fairly comprehensive records of their lives.