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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.

Tokyo life post thesis

On May 15 I handed in my thesis feeling very sleep-deprived but also very relieved. The process was very lonely, long and I got sick of staring at a screen and being in my own head. I don't know how people who have to write a dissertation do it. All in all, my thesis ended up being 135 pages and about 50,000 words. I don't envy anyone who has to read it and rumor has it on this campus that nobody (not even the committee members) really does anyway. 


Since May 15, I've been sleeping, celebrating, relaxing and trying to outline a few things for the future. I recently found out that I received a scholarship to attend one of the University of Geneva's summer school programs called "Higher Education in Emergencies" which is two weeks of learning how to make online, open source educational resources for refugees. I leave Tokyo on June 16 and fly to Switzerland, have summer school for two weeks and then fly back to Tokyo on July 1. I'll be back in Japan just for a couple of days to get my final paycheck and transcripts from the university, turn in my apartment keys, pick up my luggage and fly back to the States during the first week of July. I'm excited to go to Geneva as I've never been there before and it will be interesting to do something practical and hands-on instead of writing a thesis that nobody will ever read.

This week is my last big week before things really start to chill out. I have my MA defense on Thursday, which I'm not expecting to be fun. I'm the last graduate student to have the defense so it's hard to watch everyone else finish while I'm still waiting nervously. Saturday is the ICU Rotary Peace Seminar during which we all have 25 minutes to present our research, give thanks to our Rotarian donors and share our future plans. The event is a big one and I'm already getting anxious about public speaking in front of so many people. The day is a long one with a party at the end of it and I'm grateful that I'm the 3rd person to speak (out of ten). 

Farewell party #1 with some of my favorite people who I've met here

The farewell parties have started, which is hard to believe and it's made me realize how many relationships I've formed here and how much these friends have helped me grow, change and learn about Japan. It's going to be very difficult to leave and I have no doubt that Sean and I will be back one day.
Read More 2 comments | Posted by Sarah Sanderson edit post

2 comments

  1. Unknown on May 30, 2017 at 3:23 PM

    Hi Sarah - sounds like an awesome program in Geneva! You should try to connect with Lisa Leenhouts-Martin! She and her husband & baby have lived in Geneva for quite a few years. Hope I run into you again soon on Chautauqua!
    Mandy Pomp :)

     
  2. Catherine on May 31, 2017 at 10:33 AM

    Congratulations! Yeah, the dissertation was a beast, but I had a year to write it. :) Congrats on the Geneva scholarship too - I'm excited for you! Maybe I'll see you over the summer in MI.

     


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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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