Mid-December View of Astana and the Esil River |
With Colleagues at Astana's Ice City |
That decision, once made, has had an effect I did not foresee. Much as a person who is terminally ill might do all she or he can to live his/her life to the fullest that health will allow, so I, too, now know when my overseas life will end. It has put a focus on the next year and a half that would not have been there had I not chosen to return to the US. The next eighteen months are there to be lived fully and well so that there will be no retrospective regrets in the years to follow. The closer the end date comes, the more precious each day will be.
Ten years. My overseas career with the State Department began in September 2005 when I boarded a plane in New York bound for Moscow. Since then I've only worked in the US for one year plus some months for language training. I already find myself looking back with memories, some bad but mostly good.
Moscow. It was a dream come true to be assigned to Embassy Moscow. I traveled for the first time as a tourist to the Soviet Union in 1978 and then again in 1981. In 1987-88 I spent six months on an IREX grant based mainly in Leningrad but with occasional travel to Moscow and Armenia, and this was followed by travel for conferences in 1994 and 2003. Returning to Moscow in 2005, I felt I had landed in a city much changed from the one I remembered in the Soviet period. The city was bright and alive with culture and commerce, and I spent every spare hour I could soaking it in. My sisters came to visit, and my son spent a long summer. When I landed in Moscow in 2005, it seemed that two years would last forever. When the movers arrived to pack me out in August 2007, I had tears in my eyes. The two years felt more as if they had been two months.
Tashkent. I had never been to Central Asia before I arrived at Embassy Tashkent in April 2008, but I had long wanted to go there. My interest in Uzbekistan had been there ever since the days I had devoted myself to researching the Stalin period purges in Soviet astronomy. The fate of the Tashkent Astronomical Observatory and its director Alexander Postoev were key to many of the cascading events that extended all the way to Leningrad and that consumed the country's best astronomers. Now I got to visit that observatory at last and share archival papers with the current director who was striving to restore the observatory's lost history. Even if much of my life was being ever more consumed by a long and contentious divorce, I traveled and saw the historic cities of Samarkand, Bukhara, Khiva, and Kokand. My son came to visit twice, and we took long trips together to Karakalpakstan and the Ferghana Valley.
Bucharest. I've already written volumes about my time in Romania. As readers of my previous web journal know (http://attitude-analyst.blogspot.com), I thought my career was over when I first landed in Bucharest. My assignment there seemed a disaster, but instead my three years in Bucharest were the making of the person I am today. 2012 was easily the happiest year of a life that has included many good years, and I now consider Romania a second home.
Work. Yes, official work has kept me busy wherever I have served. I've been busiest in Astana and in Moscow, least busy in Romania, and have participated in diplomatic endeavors that I'm proud to look back on. Still, if I'm to look at the years I'm proudest of when it comes to official work, I will find them in the years when I worked on the Hubble Space Telescope project before joining the State Department.
Christmas with NN |
Carving Turkey on Boxing Day with BL |
Happy New Year! С Новым Годом! An nou fericit! Янги йилингиз билан! Жаңа жыл құтты болсын!
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