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Waiting

What am I doing right now? I am waiting for the Foreign Service to call and invite me to training, ending my happy lifestyle in Tucson and sending me into a swirl of newness — new job, new home, new location, new schools, new training. And while I am understandably anxious about all those things, and while I am definitely dreading the day Ben has to say good-bye to his best friend and the school he’s loved since kindergarten, there is a huge part of me that just wants to cut through all this waiting and get it over with already. You know, lance that wound? Stop the anticipation?

I have never, ever, ever been good at waiting.

Two dogs anxiously await their treat

They're not good at waiting, either.

Strangely enough, when I thought I wouldn’t get on the foreign service register, I was fine with the wait. I know I was fine because half the Yahoo! group who are also waiting to hit the register totally freaked out when I mentioned how long my file was in suitability review (5 months). Now every time someone’s file goes to suitability review, my name comes up as a specter…”I hope it doesn’t take as long as that ONE person (aka, me), who had to wait 5 months.”  I’ve now become the warning sign on the highway of the FS clearance process. However, for most of that, I didn’t really worry about it. In fact, I spent a lot of time reassuring people that it was perfectly fine, this was, after all, a top security clearance and a very important job, and ‘these things take time.’ By which I meant, “They are going to come to their senses ANY MINUTE and realize that I couldn’t possibly rate this kind of job after 9 years in the backwater of the American West combined with a short mommy-track, some random volunteer work and a master’s degree in a completely unrelated field? Right? Right????” So the length of the wait didn’t bother me, it just meant I had more time before I had to confess to everyone that I didn’t make the cut after all.

Yes, this is really how my mind works. Frightening, isn’t it?

But then I did make it. But oh, I was at the very end of the register! They knew to put me at the back!

But then I passed the Japanese exam. And suddenly, I wasn’t just on the register. I was on the register, and COMPETITIVE.

Can I just add that I have always been slightly bitter that I spent 8+ hours a day studying for almost 2 years to learn a language I was never able to use again after coming back to the U.S.? Hmmmmm?  Well, THE UNIVERSE JUST SHOWED ME, didn’t it? That psychotic, I-must-learn-this-super-hard-language-immediately urge actually made something happen 10 years later!  Oh, the vagaries of the universe!

Although it always has surprised and sometimes even impressed people. You know, that I’m American, and I speak another language, and it isn’t Spanish. YES I JUST WENT THERE. But seriously, my last name? It’s Hispanic. So when I mention I have a second language, there is a certain assumption made that that second language is Spanish. After all, if my first name was Sumiyo, they wouldn’t expect me to know Hindi, right?  I’m just sayin’. But the short version is — Japanese rocketed me up to the top third of the list, and now I’m one of the cool kids. Sweet.

Anyway, so now that I know I HAVE A SHOT AT THIS, all of a sudden the waiting is perfectly unbearable. I just checked the aforementioned Yahoo! group to see if anyone else was announcing an invitation to the January A-100 class (that’s the training class where “you’re in!” and you sign on the dotted line). It was the fifth time today, not including the 10 desperate minutes I spent trying to log on with my iPhone this morning while drinking my coffee.  And, it doesn’t count the million times I watched the screen refresh while I ate lunch. I WAS TRYING TO SOUND SANE HERE, PEOPLE. But yes, five times…plus a little. And the last time I checked? Oh, right. Those last two postings — they’re mine. Because everybody else is out on a Friday night doing something more interesting than waiting for the tea to boil and obsessively checking a Yahoo! groups board.

Four dogs wait anxiously for a treat

Except for these guys, of course. They have all the time in the world to wait for a peanut butter sandwich.

So here I am. Waiting. Waiting. WAITING.

This is just karma for never listening to my mom when she said, “Nice girls don’t call boys!”  Oh wait. That wasn’t it. It was, “Well, if you’re set on calling, at least wait a couple of days!” I never, ever listened to her advice. And here I am, waiting for things to change, waiting for decisions to happen and to say good-bye to good friends, waiting for good and waiting for bad and waiting for sad, too.

Sit, Missy, sit.

Wait, Missy, wait.

Good girl.

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I passed my Japanese Test!!!


Shiken wo gokaku shimashita suckahs!
Translation: I passed my test, suckahs!!

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Failing

I want to take a moment here to talk about failure, my life, and my various ability/inability to cope with failure. Sometimes I have to adjust my perspective, so that I see myself and my situation differently, in order to keep my sanity. So here goes…

Like a lot of high-achieving young sort-of young women, I have always been terrified of failure. It would seem that the daughter of two working-class parents (my dad was a mechanic and my mother a hairdresser, both of whom got their GED’s late in life) would be happy just to graduate high school, and ecstatic to go on to graduate college. Not me: I always had a “not-good-enough” meter that worked overtime.

Upon graduating college, I found the idea of becoming a secretary or insurance agent (jobs available to me with an English degree) distasteful, so I went out on a limb and took a job with the JET Programme, working as the first female foreign teacher on a small island in the Amami-Oshima island chain of southern Japan. Did I want to be a teacher? No. Did I really even want to go to Japan? Well, the answer was kind of a mixed bag. I had some friends on the mainland, and I looked forward to seeing them, but the idea of living in Japan long-term made me want to throw up — which I did. For 12 straight hours on the plane to Tokyo, hardly getting to enjoy the first (and only) time I have ever gotten to fly business-class.

Was it enough to teach on a rural island for a year? Of course not. I HAD to learn Japanese, at all costs. I desperately wanted a second language, and I worked my butt off learning Japanese. Some days I studied over 8 hours, writing kanji or kana or vocab words hundreds of times. Was that enough? Nope. I took a Japanese class for 6 weeks in Okinawa, also with an incredibly difficult schedule (I had 4 hours of class, 6 hours of homework every day). Was that enough? Nope. I volunteered/was recruited to translate for the tourist department of the city government on my little island. Was that enough?

Guess.

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On the Register…start the clock!

So, for the last week I’ve been in a state of controlled bitchiness suspense, waiting to hear if I cleared final suitability and made it to the register.

For those unfamiliar with the current process to become a foreign service officer (aka “diplomat”), it goes like this:
Written test –> Essay test –> Oral assessment –> Medical clearance | Security clearance –> Final assessment –> Register –> A-100 Class –> Training –> 1st posting somewhere in the world.

Simple, right?

At the end of the leap through each hoop, I’ve stopped to celebrate. Some hoops were scarier than others…like the oral assessment. Nobody likes to spend a day locked in a secure facility with the words “You are under continuous observation” posted in the waiting room. Some hoops were just plain frustrating (medical) or embarrassing (during the security interview, the poor security officer had to ask me if I had any deviant sexual habits that might be embarrassing to myself or the US government, for example. This was made all the more embarrassing because the SO was clearly a very genteel southern man who was also extremely embarrassed by this exchange. Just FYI, my answer was “no.”)

Anyway, most of the correspondence about my candidacy has been via e-mail, so I was surprised and somewhat terrified to find that I would be get a letter “in a week or so” week before last. I spent all last week very tightly wound, and had to keep myself from running home every day to check the mailbox. Today, I actually came home late, and the thought, “That letter is never going to come” was running through my head when I got to the mailbox.

There was a letter.

It was very flat.

I panicked. I couldn’t open it. I took it inside, where, thankfully, I had a moment to stare at it, since today is Marti’s day to pick up niños and the house was empty.

I’ve gotten a lot of rejection letters over the years. There have been rude, polite, apologetic rejection letters; by far they are usually a form letter, and usually no more than a page.

Did I mention this letter was very flat?

So, with shaking hands, I tore the envelope open and saw this:

I made it to the register! I test in Japanese in just two days. I can hardly believe I made it through all those hoops!

Passing my test in Japanese will increase my score on the register, but only time will tell if it will be enough.

Nevertheless, it’s time to celebrate! I can hardly believe I made it this far, and I’m so overwhelmed right now I hardly know what to say except…

Whoo Hoo!!

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