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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.

Seminar wrap-up and the start of a new semester

I returned from São Paulo last weekend tired and relieved but also full of new ideas and skills to start the new semester.  My workshops went really well and I have received a lot of emails with positive feedback and requests for additional materials and answers to questions.  This past week we were supposed to start classes officially at UFPA but because of a computer glitch in the registration system they moved it to this Monday.  English Without Borders classes are in full swing, however, and we used last week to get our schedules in order, advertise for Conversation Clubs and events and nail down our extracurricular community projects.  This semester I will be working long days Monday through Wednesday at the university and then I have Thursday and Friday to study, do research and help out with some writing workshops and pre-departure orientation seminars that the U.S. embassy offers to Brazilian students hoping to apply and then study at American institutions.  In other news, Sean and I finally received our Brazilian ID cards yesterday after waiting for about seven months and just in time to be leaving the country in about two more months. 

At the enhancement seminar there was a great photographer (Mary Evans) and her pictures were recently shared online.  Here's a few where she caught me to give you an idea of what our experience looked like:

Downtown São Paulo (photo cred Erica Johnson)

São Paulo's Train Station (photo cred Erica Johnson)

At the art museum (photo cred Erica Johnson)

São Paulo grafitti (photo cred Erica Johnson)

Fulbright ETAs 2014

Speaking at my first workshop "Toward Learner Autonomy: Language Advising Outside the EFL Classroom"

Opening remarks in the main hall

Participants in one of my workshops talking about language learning challenges and strategies

Activities during my second workshop on language teaching (this is the first activity I learned at OSU)


Leading a small group discussion on the highs and lows of the first semester


More fun times in the teaching workshop - I didn't use a PPT and we hardly sat down


Tom Healy, member of Fulbright Board

Patricia - my fabulous supervisor
Something else Sean and I are thinking a lot about is what we are going to do next.  We know that right after the grant in Brazil ends, we are going to take a month long CELTA (Certified English Language Teacher of Adults) course in Colombia and then head home to Holland, Michigan on December 15.  But after that we are not so sure.  Your prayers, thoughts, ideas and suggestions would be appreciated!
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Mid-Year Seminar in São Paulo

Van Gogh
This week all of us (120 ETAs from Brazil and 30 ETAs from Argentina and Uruguay) met up in São Paulo for a week-long Mid Year Seminar.  We just finished day one and it has been a lot of fun but very busy and a little bit overwhelming simply because of the number of people involved in the event.  Today there were many welcome and introductory speeches followed by a group activity, lunch and then various options of city tours. I went on the museum tour and checked out São Paulo's museum of art and the Portuguese language museum. 

Matisse

It has been cool to be in such a bit city such as São Paulo because of all of the variety of things to do, foods to try and places to visit.  Last night I went out with a group for Thai food but this night I am staying in to try and prepare for some workshops and presentations tomorrow.  In the morning I am speaking about different teaching activities and in the afternoon I am going to talk about language advising.  I don't usually get too nervous when teaching English in front of Brazilians but I am pretty nervous about how things will go tomorrow.  There's something about presenting in front of your peers that causes an extra layer of anxiety.  Fingers crossed that all goes well tomorrow!

Picasso

Monet
Read More 0 comments | Posted by Sarah Sanderson edit post

Anniversary Weekend

Our hotel room - no mosquito net!
The rooms at the Radisson were enormous and really nice - it was so fun!
We had been planning for a couple of months to spend a weekend at a nice hotel for our third anniversary.  Our goal was to enjoy time with each other and a few days away from the intense heat and humidity and the hungry bugs.  We had also been wanting to try the famous five star Amazon restaurant in the city called Remanso do Bosque.  We just got back today and had a great time even though we were just a few blocks away at the local Radisson.  It was really fun to have a few special days of luxury away from it all, swimming in the pool, trying crazy new foods and going up for seconds and thirds at the awesome breakfast spread.   Now it's back to reality and I'm sitting in front of the fans and slapping mosquitoes, but I can still smell wafts of the trendy upscale shampoo and conditioner from my hair left over from our multiple hot showers.  It's the little things.

Awesome breakfast buffet
I spent most of my time at the rooftop pool - love at first sight
For our first night we walked to Domino's Pizza and got a pepperoni and mushroom pie - something that we have been wanting to do for awhile but is normally a little out of our price range.  The taste of home was awesome!  On Saturday night we took a taxi to Remanso do Bosque to try out the tasting menu.  We were there right at 7pm when it opened because we had heard the tasting took about 3 hours and we were hungry!  Brazilians eat dinner much later than the normal American supper hour and other dinner guests didn't start rolling in until about 8:30.  We ordered fancy drinks and then started the twelve course culinary delight.  The two chefs who created the restaurant and the menu are brothers from Belém.  They only use local ingredients from indigenous communities or from the surrounding Amazon.  Sean and I had never done something like this before and it was a very entertaining and delicious experience.  By the end, however, I was so full that after just a bite or two I would pass my plate to Sean.  We both agreed that the best dish was the homemade chocolate mousse with handmade chocolate from a nearby island.  Somehow there was magically more room in my stomach to finish all of mine on my own.  Bonus points that we got to eat it out of a fun clay pot with a mouth shovel.

Twelve Course Tasting Menu (of course I took pictures!):

"Tacacachaça" Artesenal alcohol with Jambú leaves and Passion Fruit juice (Drink: Mango and Ginger Caipirinha)
"Beiju cica, Beiju de tapioca, Manteiga de leite de Búfalo" Manioc biscuits with buffalo butter
"Manga com farinha" Mango and manioc flour ceviche
"Ariá in Caldo de Tucupi" Amazon potato in a type of indigenous broth
Fresh raw oyster
"Pupunha, Pele de arroz, Amendoim, Pipoca" Pupunha fruit, rice skin, peanuts and shaved popcorn
"Filhote na brasa, Leite de castanha" Grilled Filhote fish in nut milk
"Tucunaré na folha, Tucupi, Farinha d'agua, Rapadura" Tucunaré fish cooked in banana leaf, broth, homemade flour and brown sugar
"Pirarucu defumado, Banana da terra, Urucum" Smoked Pirarucu fish, banana gnocchi in a Urucum sauce
"Arroz de Pato" Duck rice with egg
"Bacuri, Hibisco, Tapioca" Bacuri fruit, Hibiscus and Manioc flour
"Cacau do Combú" Chocolate mousse from Combú Island
Happy 3rd Anniversary babe!  Cheers to many more.

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São Luis in Maranhão


It's an odd, in between time at the university right now.  After vacation finished in July, we had two weeks of work with an intensive class for English Without Borders because the semester hasn't officially started yet.  Next week all ETAs in Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay head to São Paulo for our mid-year seminar and then classes begin the week after that.  So until then, we have been trying to get back into the swing of things, preparing presentations for the upcoming seminar and reflecting on our vacation.




One of the biggest perks, without a doubt, of teaching abroad is the amount of vacation time.  This year we had the month of July off and took three small trips to nearby places.  Our first adventure was to visit some of my mentees in the capital city of São Luis in the neighboring state of Maranhão.  We spent three days in the city and spent two of them at the university UFMA (Federal University of Maranhão) and a third day exploring a nearby historic island.  After school we spent time walking around the city which is beautiful and famous for its cobbled streets and restored colonial buildings and mansions. 



We stayed right in the historic city center which was quirky and charming.  The iconic image of São Luis is of colorful ceramic tiles which can be seen everywhere.  Many of the tiles are from the 19th century and are often blue or blue and white from Portugal, France, Belgium and Germany.  The tiles provided a durable means of protecting walls from the omnipresent humidity and heat that comes with being a northern city on the coast of Brazil.



It was also fun to try some of the regional foods and drinks such as stuffed crab, shrimp stew and the city's specialty arroz de cuxá, rice with shrimp, toasted sesame mixed with a bitter herb called vinagreira.  The drink that everyone said we had to try was a neon pink pop called Jesus (named after the guy who came up with the recipe) that tastes like bubblegum.  It was way too sweet for me but interesting to try nonetheless.  While we were there we say everyone drinking Jesus and it became obvious that it was the beverage of choice.  The locals that we talked to said that it has always outsold Coke there so Coca-Cola finally just bought it.  The marketing slogan used to promote the soda calls it the "Pink Dream." 



Sean was more interested in the unusual-looking bottles of purple alcohol hanging in the central market.  The most common alcoholic drink in Brazil is called cachaça which is normally made from sugar cane.  The type of cachaça in São Luis, however, is made from manioc root and is called Tiquira and Sean said it didn't taste half bad. At least this lilac-colored liquor will be more tasty to try and share at home than the vile bottle of snake wine brought back from Vietnam.  Gross.


Read More 0 comments | Posted by Sarah Sanderson edit post

Waiting in Line

Line at the bank waiting to use an ATM

I spend a lot of my time in Brazil waiting in line.  It's incredible, really, when I think about how many minutes a day I spend standing or sitting until it's my turn to buy food, copy papers, send mail, take out cash etc.  Yesterday I waited over an hour to send some postcards and today I am at the university teaching and running errands.  Let me share an average day with you so you can get idea of how often (and how long) Brazilians have to wait in line.

The line of students waiting to get food at lunch at the university


7:30am Wait in line to get on the bus.  Bus is full.  Wait in line for the next bus.
7:45am Manage to get on next bus and wait in line standing inside the bus to pay my fare.
8:30-11:30 English class at UFPA
12:00 Wait in line for 1 hour to get lunch ticket for university cafeteria
1:00 With ticket in hand, get in another line for 30 minutes to pick up food
2:00 After lunch, wait in line to use a computer to print a copy of the bill I have to pay
2:10 After printing bill, wait in line to pay for the paper that I printed
2:30 Head to the bank and wait in line for 30 minutes to use an ATM to take out cash to pay the bill
3:00 Wait in line for 5 minutes to get a paper number to give money to an agent to pay the bill
3:05 Wait in a chair for 30 minutes until my number is called to pay the bill.
3:45 Work in the computer lab for awhile until it's time to wait for a bus to go home, wait to pay the bus fare and then wait in traffic if it's anywhere in between 5-7pm.
5:50 Arrive early for my doctor's appointment and wait 1 hour and 20 minutes to see the doctor.
7:20 Home - no more lines!

A great idea when there are no numbers to keep track of where you are in line
There are a few things that keep me from going insane while waiting in line.  Sometimes I try and talk to people around me to practice Portuguese and meet new students.  But most of the time I read books on my Nook.  I have gotten through an astonishing number of books this year because of this and it has helped a lot with my mental and emotional state when at times I feel like I am just a tiny part in a system of never-ending inefficiency. If you are looking for a few good end-of-summer reads, here are my suggestions:

The Lace Makers of Glenmara - Heather Barbieri
Amy and Isabelle - Elizabeth Strout
*The Boys in the Boat - Daniel James Brown
*The Nazi Officer's Wife - Edith H Baer
*Etched in Sand - Regina Calcaterra
The Light Between Oceans - M L Stedman
*The Book Thief - Markus Zusak
Twelve Years a Slave - Dolen Perkins
*The Fault in Our Stars - John Green
I know this much is true - Wally Lamb (kind of intense)
*Flight Behavior - Barbara Kinsolver
*The House Girl - Tara Conklin
*The Good House - Ann Leary

(* my favorites)

Happy reading and I hope you can enjoy it without waiting in line!
Read More 1 Comment | Posted by Sarah Sanderson edit post

In diapers

Sean and I found ourselves at the local supermarket the other day buying diapers for the first time.  Nope, it's not what you think; I didn't run away to Brazil to have a secret baby but rather I was desperate for an effective hot compress option (not surprisingly, it's rather impossible to find a decent hot water bottle selection in the Amazon). 

We just finished a month of vacation (which also explains the lack of blog posts in July - I didn't have cell phone service most of the places we visited, much less an internet connection) and during our last mini vacation we visited some remote regions of the Amazon basin.  Unfortunately, I came back with a little more than just photos and tacky souvenirs and headed right to the emergency room upon return because of a very suspicious looking and painful mystery bug bite (?).

Cezanne, one of the resident house cats, keeping me company during recovery
Hospital service, conditions, paperwork and quality in Brazil could be an entirely separate blog post and although I really wanted to avoid the experience, I was desperate.  After waiting for hours the doctor told me that it was just an infected ingrown hair but after crying and lots of emotional and muddled Portuguese (on my end) she finally prescribed me some ointment and antibiotics but cautioned me to not use any of it saying that it "would go away on it's own."  It did not.  Also, trust me, readers, this is not an ingrown hair.

At this point my entire leg was red, swollen and so painful that I could barely walk.  Being over dramatic and prone to anxiety, I started imagining life as an amputee.  I started taking antibiotics and applying the cream obediently while also downing ibuprofen for the pain and swelling.  When a fellow ETA suggested diaper hot compresses I had to hold myself back from hugging her with relief.  Of course! Genius! What a great idea and why didn't I think of that?!  Things started to get better for my leg, but the "bite" just got worse.



After hearing stories from one of my roommates here who had a similar problem but then "the skin turned black and had to be surgically removed" I decided it was time for a second opinion.  I went to a different doctor last night who took a look at the gorged knob on my leg and proclaimed that there were a couple of options.  It could be a cut that got very infected, an infected insect bite or it could contain an egg or larva of some kind of insect (ew).  She gave me more meds, a different kind of cream, prescribed elevation and bed rest and told me to come back on Friday to see if they will have to cut into it or not.

So this week, instead of going back to work, I've been driving myself crazy at home with worry while trying to do work and sweating in front of the fan with a diaper on my leg.  The only happy parties with this arrangement are the cats who are over the moon with the fact that I'm on the floor with them all day.  There are days when traveling is glamorous, fun and exciting and then there are the days of swatting mosquitoes and sweaty Pampers.  Today is going down in the books as the latter. 
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  • In Mandarin: 旅遊癮 (lǚyóu yǐn)
      According to my Mandarin teacher, the term 'wanderlust' can best be translated as 'a travel addiction or craving'. In the above translation, 'yǐn' has several meanings such as 'a strong impulse', 'a longing', or 'a desire'.
  • About Me

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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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    Grateful for my very tolerant, supportive and easygoing husband who's always game for a new adventure

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