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U.S. Foreign Service Officer headed to Wuhan, China

The mission of a U.S. diplomat in the Foreign Service is to promote peace, support prosperity, and protect American citizens while advancing the interests of the U.S. abroad. The work that diplomats do has an impact on the world as they serve at one of any of the more than 270 embassies, consulates and other diplomatic missions in The Americas, Africa, Europe and Eurasia, East Asia and Pacific, Middle East and North Africa, and South Asia.

The duties of a Consular Officer include to provide emergency and non-emergency services to American citizens and protect our borders through the proper adjudication of visas to foreign nationals and passports to American citizens. We adjudicate immigrant and non-immigrant visas, facilitate adoptions, help evacuate Americans, combat fraud, and fight human trafficking. Consular Officers touch people’s lives in important ways, often reassuring families in crisis. They face many situations which require quick thinking under stress and develop and use a wide range of skills, from managing resources and conducting public outreach to assisting Americans in distress.

Great day for a "Sports Meeting" (Day 1 - Friday)


Sean, Peter, Steve and Ken before the opening ceremonies

At about 5:15 pm Sean and I received an email from the Foreign Language Department that said all classes were canceled the following day, Friday, due to the "Sports Meeting." This is how things seem to work in China - news, changes, requests and cancellations are all relayed at the last minute. Not that it was bad news, however, and we were happy to be able to spend the day outdoors on the track joining in on the competitions and the usual elaborate and excessive ceremonies and celebrations that China is famous for.

Lining up before the parade and then marching around on the track

A "Sports Meeting" is what the Chinese use to refer to the event more commonly known in America as a "Track Meet." Whenever I would ask a student if they were planning on competing in the track meet my answer would almost always be something like, "Huh? You mean the sports meeting?" But a sports meeting is no ordinary track meet in China. It contains most of the usual track and field events but includes a few more hilarious and unexpected additions such as (but not limited to) sit-ups, push-ups, rope skip, basketball shoot-out, soccer goal kick, ping-pong, shuttlecock toss, four-legged race, sack race, 20x50 relay, hacky sack, volleyball forearm passing and darts. Needless to say, the event made for an especially entertaining two days at Jiangsu School Teachers University of Technology.

Students waving flowers and flags and lines of students performing Tai Chi

I was awakened at around 6:30am on Friday morning by the loud, patriotic music coming from the track. I put on some dark, formal attire and Sean and I headed over to join the teachers in the parade of the opening ceremony. The Chinese take their ceremonies very seriously and this particular one was no different. There were flags, students marching in various uniforms, female students waving flowers, a dragon dance, balloons, student performances of some of their athletic routines while in their matching track suits, and of course, many speeches in Chinese by the higher-ups of the institution.
One of the dragons used in the student performance

It was beautiful weather and all of the students seemed to be in a great mood. Many students participated in the events, others volunteered to help run things and still others came to cheer their classmates and teachers on. All of the teachers were allowed to participate in two events. Sean signed up for the high jump and long jump on Friday and I registered for the abdominal crunches and the 800m run on Saturday. Ken and Peter also signed up to participate in the 800m run and the push-up competition.

Sean getting ready for his winning jump

It was a great day for Sean and he ended up not only winning the high-jump competition but setting a new university record as well at 1.78m or 5'10". This caused quite a stir on campus and a crowd gathered, girls jumped and cheered and cameras flashed while watching the American jump. Sean didn't fare quite so well in the long jump as there was some confusion over where you actually had to jump from. Competing when you not only don't know what exactly is going on and can't speak the language always makes for a bonus challenge. The boys ended the day with a 4x100 relay (Steve, Peter, Ken and Sean) and managed to get fourth place against the other teachers and departments.
Sean jumping high and long
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    Sarah Sanderson
    I am currently in Mandarin language training as a new diplomat in the U.S. Foreign Service. Sean and I depart for Wuhan, China in November 2019 for my first tour in consular affairs.
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