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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.

Last day in Melaka





After breakfast on Monday morning we decided to take a ride on the spinning tower which was labeled "Malaysia's first gyro-spinning tower". In this tower you sit in a circle around a pole and it takes you up high over the city while spinning. Thought slightly nauseating, the view over the city was spectacular. ($4 breakfast, $14 tower)


We headed to one last museum - the governor's mansion - after the gyro-tower which proved to be only slightly interesting. What was more fun was trying the last things on our list to eat which were chicken rice balls and pineapple tarts. We went to a restaurant which only served chicken rice balls which were, essentially, rice cooked in chicken broth in the shape of balls served with cooked chicken and spicy garlic sauce. They were super tasty though! The pineapple tarts were a dried pineapple paste inside a delightfully flaky pastry shell. We all ate four as we waited for the local bus to take us back to the inter-city bus station. ($3 museum, $5 lunch, $1 tarts, $9 buses)


After two hours on the bus and a metro ride back to the golden triangle area Sean and I tried a new youth hostel which was offering discounted rates and had beds available. This one was called the "Combo Inn" and proved to be much better than the bedbug inn (though this one probably had bedbugs too though no peeping toms - that I know of at least). We met up with Daniel again for dinner and since we hadn't eaten much all day we splurged on an incredible dinner of Malaysian food in a gorgeous restaurant slightly off the main strip. We had spring rolls, braised lamb shank in coconut curry sauce and a spicy mango and greens salad. ($2 metro, $17 room, $39 dinner)


For the evening's activity we chose to go up in the Kuala Lumpur tower which was pricey but worth it for the nighttime view of the neighboring Petronas Towers. Though we have spent quite a few days in Malaysia so far this vacation has gone by super fast and I can't believe that we will be leaving for Indonesia soon! ($25 tower, $4 slurpees and drinks, $3 photo) Total =$126 for two people


Read More 1 Comment | Posted by Sarah Sanderson edit post

1 Comment

  1. David on January 21, 2011 at 6:17 AM

    Great pic of DTMS!!!

     


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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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