Sunday, 17 January 2016

Off on my travels again

It has been a year since I last prepared to go overseas and as I do so again the familiar feelings and routines kick back in. The initial excitement and anticipation is replaced with apprehension and activity. It feels ‘right’ to be embarking on this next contract but in many ways it is a step into the unknown so it is also a time of mixed emotions.
Although it is my 11th overseas assignment there is still a lot to do in order to be ready to go and for a few weeks my life consists of e-mails, lists, visits and packing. There are multiple e-mails back and forth with Head Office making sure all the required documents are read and signed and all the practical arrangements (like flight bookings, insurance, etc.) are in place. I make lists of things I need to do (tell my bank I will be using my debit card overseas, get my haircut, check my vaccinations are up-to-date, etc.) and lists of things I need to buy (an international driving permit, US Dollars, toiletries, etc.). I try to see as many friends as possible before I go. I start ‘gathering’ – gradually putting more things in the corner of my bedroom that I want to take with me and I go over and over in my head the clothes I will pack. This also requires some research about what the climate is going to be like and what is culturally acceptable and usually results in things being added to the 'to buy' list. The actually packing happens the day before I leave when everything I want to take is laid out on my bed and things are added and taken away until I am happy that nothing has been forgotten and everything can be justified. I try and fit it all into one suitcase and even though I think I have kept things to a bare minimum I inevitably find there are things I take that I never use or wear. 
This time I am preparing to go to Jordan for three months to work with Medair in one of their four programmes in the Middle East responding to the humanitarian fallout from the crises in Syria and Iraq (the other programmes are in Syria, Iraq and Lebanon). It’s a part of the world I haven’t been to before and I will be living and working in the capital Amman. There are an estimated 600,000 refugees living in Jordan, mostly from Syria (although some reports suggest this could now be as many as 1 million) amongst a population of around 7 million people. Most of these refugees are living outside of formal refugee camps in sub-standard accommodation with limited access to water and healthcare and Medair is working to improve the lives of some of the most vulnerable. You can read more about Medair’s work in Jordan here. I will be working in the office in Amman supporting the project activities both in Jordan and the surrounding countries through the strengthening of the logistics, finance and HR functions. 

I will endeavour to update this blog on a regular basis over the next three months with reflections, anecdotes and photos of things I see and do. So thanks for stopping by…


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