10 April 2016

Reason, Season, Lifetime


Many years ago I ran across something on the Internet called “Reason, Season, Lifetime.” It was a popular little piece about how people come into your life for different purposes: some for just a brief time (a reason), some for a longer time (a season), and others for the rest of your life (a lifetime). 

You can still find it on the Net. There are hundreds of Internet “memes” out there with this saying, accompanied by the advice that when you know which a person is, you’ll know what to do with that person. To be honest, there are so many of them, that the sentiment has become rather cliche.

But “Reason, Season, Lifetime” had an impact on me when I first read it because I mostly agreed with the premise, and I have often thought about it over the years. I pulled it up recently from my old computer files and read it again as part of my preparation to finally write the long-overdue third installment of my topic about souls. I found that, while I still basically agree with it, my interpretation had changed a bit from that rather simplistic original piece. So I decided to write a blog post reflecting my updated interpretation.

During our lives, thousands of people pass in and out of our presence. Most just keep on going: people on the street, in airports and shopping malls, on various modes of public transport, etc. They are a sort of a background for what is happening in our own lives, and each of them has their own life situations in which we are just part of their backgrounds. But there are others who stand out from that background, who come into our lives in a more meaningful way.

A Reason


For each of us, there are many, many people who come into our life circles for some specific reason. It might be extremely small, like just to make us notice something, or to give us a message or sign. Maybe they help us to see something about ourselves. Maybe they come into our lives because we have some message for them or a small purpose in their lives.

At the level of low impact, maybe it’s someone who bumps into you in a coffee shop and causes you to spill your pumpkin-spice latte. You get angry, but then later realize that your anger was not a good reaction; you learn something, and perhaps you become better.

It could be a coworker or other person whom you find to be sort of annoying. At some point, maybe you get to thinking about why the person annoys you. Maybe the person just has some personal problem, or maybe you are being too sensitive or critical. Maybe you learn to be a little more tolerant.

It might be some person who comes into your life one time, or regularly for some short period of time, and brightens your day with his or her smile, laughter and upbeat attitude. Such a person might make you forget about any troubles you have and feel more positive.

The person’s reason for coming into your life might be a little more substantial and the message more important. But still, this person is not meant to have a big impact or remain for a long time. Mission accomplished, he or she moves on. Or you do. And there is no sadness or regret about it because there had been no special closeness.

I am sure that we can all think of such people who are in our lives now or who came to us in the past. We might not exactly see what the reason was, but if we think about it for a bit, we can probably at least see that there was a purpose. These days, I think most of my students are such people. Many of them have some "reason" for me, and I no doubt have a reason to be in their lives, even if it is only related to teaching them English.

A Season


Some of the most memorable people in our lives are those who join us for a season. They come to provide some measure of closeness: they might be close or even best friends for some time, they might be special teachers or coaches, or they might be lovers.

“Seasons” come into our lives for much more than to simply deliver a message or point us in a particular direction. They become an important part of our lives for a time. They might have an important lesson for us to learn, or maybe it is that person who needs to learn something from us. It might be that our purpose in each other’s lives is to learn something important together, perhaps through an adventure or maybe just through sharing and relating with each other and helping each other grow.

I can think of many season people who have come and gone in my life. And I remember them fondly.

A season person might show up at the right moment when we need someone special to comfort us or help us get through a difficult time. Season people don’t show up in each other’s lives by accident or random circumstance; they have some level of soul connection. They know each other and probably interacted previously in past lives. Maybe in a previous life they were lifetime people for each other, or maybe they will be in a future life. They plan their meetings even before they are born into the world.

But just as summer turns to fall and then to winter, so too these season people are not permanent in our lives. At some point, they leave because their purpose has been fulfilled. Maybe something happens that causes one or both to become upset, hurt or angry, and they drift apart. Maybe one or both simply loses interest in the relationship after the purpose has been met. Or maybe one of them dies.

There is no fault or blame when a season relationship ends, or at least there shouldn’t be. That’s just how they are meant to be. But it is never easy to lose someone who has become so close and meant so much. It can hurt.

One problem is that very often we believe that the season person was meant to stay around for a lifetime. This person is very important; you might come to rely on her or him very much. As the friendship or relationship grows and intensifies, you trust that this person will be with you always. You might get to a point where you can’t imagine life without her or him. You might even be married and certainly believe that it’s supposed to be a lifetime thing. But something happens, and it ends.

One of the biggest disappointments we can experience in life is when someone we were sure was a lifetime, turns out to be a season. Meeting a lifetime person is one of the greatest feelings we can have. We are filled with hope and comfort for the future. We make expectations. And when it doesn’t work out the way we hoped, it hurts – a lot.  And that brings me to…

A Lifetime


I guess the lifetime person is pretty easy to explain. This person stays with us until one or the other dies, and we teach each other lifetime lessons. In our life’s mission to learn, grow and improve, the lifetime people are the most important teachers we have.



Lifetime people are parents and children, wives and husbands, other close relatives, and those special friends who attach themselves to us at some point – and us to them – and then never leave us. They are the people with whom we share our deepest thoughts and feelings, or at least they should be. They are the people with whom we make ourselves most vulnerable because we trust that they won’t take advantage of that vulnerability or violate our trust.

Yes, I know – violations of that trust or serious disagreements do happen sometimes, even with a lifetime person. But the difference between the lifetime person and a season is that the violation or disagreement with a season probably means the end of the relationship; it is a sign that it's time for it to end.

But if such a problem arises with a lifetime person, it doesn’t end the relationship; the connection between them is too strong to let it die so easily. The situation becomes a learning or growth opportunity, and the bond between the two people can become even stronger. And in that strengthening, both individuals grow and become better as well.

Lifetime people are the most important of all. They are the special souls that we agree to find and be with even before we are born. Often, they are the "soulmates" whom we share multiple lives with. Somehow, we are guided to each other, and we recognize each other when we meet. And if our souls truly have that powerful connection, we won’t let each other go.

As I mentioned earlier, the hard part is knowing whether we have found a “season” or a “lifetime.” In the beginning, they often seem the same. But the lifetime stands the test of time; lifetime people refuse to quit on each other because they know that they are meant to be together not just for this lifetime, but for uncountable others. 

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Writing


Sometimes writing seems so easy for me. In those moments, my mind is clear and the words flow like a rushing mountain stream. And sometimes they even make sense.

But more often, writing is hard. It feels like a chore. My mind is muddled, distracted, pulled in a thousand directions. I have too many things I want to write about, and in the process of thinking about all of them, I find that I can't focus on one. And when I am able to decide on one thing to write about, I find that my thoughts on that topic are scattered. 

This is especially true if the thing I need to write about is particularly emotional. Trying to write an important letter, for example, can be frustrating as the tides of my emotions rise and fall from anger to wishing, from sadness to hoping. And blog posts are much the same: often I have conflicting thoughts and feelings on the subject, and it can be difficult to corral them all and cut out the right ones.

One of my biggest problems with blog posts is that I have a tendency to make them much too long. Blog posts should be relatively short and focused on a small part of a bigger subject, not the whole enchilada. This is something I want to change with this post. Oh, there will still be longer pieces - a jaguar can't completely change his spots - but I know that I should write shorter and publish more.

Frequently, I have moments of profound thought about certain subjects, but those are only thinking moments, not writing moments. I might be in the shower, lying in bed before or after sleep, walking to or from work, or in any of a number of situations where my mind works but it's not convenient to write. The great ideas fade from my memory without ever being recorded - unless, of course, I happen to think of them at the right moment later.
This kind of mental confusion, this writer's block, has handicapped me particularly in the kind of writing that I've felt for years I was meant to do: novels. I have seen myself as a novelist in waiting since I had hair - hell, even since before it began to thin.

Recently, I put together my best story ideas, fleshed them out, and asked some key people for their opinions. Then I chose one and started writing. It's still been a little slow, but at least I got it started and have been trying to keep some momentum going. Some recent life events, however, have made it exceedingly hard to focus on anything else, but I am trying.

In his quasi-autobiography, On Writing, Stephen King mentioned that one key to success is disciplining yourself to set a certain amount of time daily to write - something, anything. Even if it's not good, he believes you have to put something down, you have to have a daily goal of words or pages. You can always change it later, and you will, no matter if it's good or not. I believe he is right.



I've noticed too that there are four things that are essential for me if I am going to write successfully. One is to find the best environments in which to write - places that are quiet and where my mind can open up. And they can't be at home; my apartment is depressing and a terrible place for inspiration.

The next thing is staying off the Internet. I recognize that over the years, I have fallen into something of an addiction to the feeling of connection the Internet can give a person. I suppose this come from feeling so alone in real life most of the time. But I know I have to deal with the aloneness, maybe even embrace it and use it in my writing. 

The third thing is to renew my spiritual connection. Over the past few years, I've allowed that to become weak as I have been more consumed with work and relationship issues. I need more connection with the universal source of creativity. I need to meditate more and free myself to think in a wider, more open way.

Finally, I have to feel good. I have to feel healthy, energetic and positive. This comes from three things: eating good food, getting enough exercise, and having positive relationships with one or a few close people. Only the first two depend entirely on me, and I've not done my best with those in the past. But I can - and must - do better. As for the third, well, it's not up to me alone - I can only try to do the best that I can do and then hope for the best.

Short blog post finished. Time to work on the book.



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27 March 2016

Ten Years of Ukraine



Today is a pretty significant anniversary.  Ten years ago, March 27, 2006, I came to Ukraine for the very first time.  It was just a two-week visit, and I had no idea at that time that it would be the start of a ten-year odyssey that would be arguably the most remarkable period of my life.

The Arrival


I really didn’t know what to expect when my plane touched down in Boryspil early that Monday. It was the culmination of a wild weekend. I had just returned to Denver Saturday morning from a week-long business trip to Peru, and I had only a day to organize, pack and prepare for my two weeks in Ukraine. I left Denver Sunday morning, and owing to time-zone changes, arrived in Kyiv early Monday afternoon.

I was dog-tired as I got off the last of the three planes that carried me from Denver to Kyiv. Going through passport control was a bit intimidating that first time, but it’s gotten better since then. After emerging from customs, I looked around for the guide I was expecting but whose face was unknown. A young girl named Marina soon greeted me and we were off in a taxi to find my hotel. And so it all began.

Why I Came


My reason for coming that first time – although I am loathe to admit it – was that I had gotten involved in the online scam of websites that promote dating and marriage with women from the former Soviet Union. I really didn’t know much about this “industry” and had gotten into it accidentally in 2005 while researching things to do in Almaty, Kazakhstan, where I thought I would be working. Up until that point, Ukraine had never entered my mind as a destination for any reason.

But as it turned out, I received letters from a number of women in Ukraine and struck up some correspondence with a couple of them, one of whom seemed particularly interesting. She invited me to come and meet her. The situation in Kazakhstan didn’t work out, so I decided to make the trip. About two weeks before I was due to arrive, I got a letter that she had suddenly become engaged. That seemed really strange, and I figured out soon after that the woman probably never really existed; the letters were likely written by an agency employee and the photos were probably fake.

But it was too late to cancel, so I made the trip. I found an independent translation agency in an eastern city called Kharkiv, and they sent a translator/guide to help me. I did meet a couple of other women, but I quickly figured out that the whole thing was a scam. The women were “professional daters,” whose game was to meet a succession of men who would take them out to nice dinners or shows, and then leave.

The whole “industry” had bad people on both sides: cynical women who scam clueless foreign men for money and despicable guys who travel to these countries as “sex tourists,” using the nicer and more vulnerable girls for a week of sex and then never being in contact again. I wanted no further part of that, and I was embarrassed to have been involved with it at all.

That was the bad part. But there were some good points of my two weeks in Kyiv; a lot, in fact.

A Turning Point


I saw many different and interesting places in the city and had a lot of fun, mostly with my hired guide. Having learned some Russian years before, it was interesting to be in the midst of the Russian and Ukrainian languages. Even the sore spots of the city – street beggars, dull Soviet-era architecture, and horrible drivers – were intriguing in their own way.

At one point, while we were returning to the center from a visit to an open-air museum of historical Ukrainian building styles, I looked out the window at the people going about their business. We were in traffic, moving slowly through a mixed neighborhood of residential and small-business buildings. The houses were typically dull five-to nine-level apartment buildings, and the streets were dotted with grocery stores and other small businesses.

Suddenly the thought came to me: I could live here. It was a feeling I’ve had in few other places in my life; throughout my many travels, only Colorado and Ireland come to mind. Sure, language was an issue, but I could learn, I could adapt. After all, I had learned enough Spanish to get by pretty well in Peru.

I was at a point in my life where something inside of me was crying out for change. It’s something I had gone through several times in the past. I seem to need some kind of change – big change – every five to eight years or so. Ten years ago, I was feeling that need, and in Kyiv, the seed of change began to take root.

Before Kyiv


I had been working for a small project management company for almost eight years, and it had been great. Doing that kind of work and being asked to join that company was something I never could have anticipated when it happened in 1998. I worked with good people, had interesting adventures in places like South America and Kazakhstan, and had regained the high level of professional self-esteem that had taken some hits in the early ‘90s.

And I was doing very well financially. By 2006, I was living in a comfortable, cabin-style house on four acres of forest in the beautiful foothills of the Rocky Mountains. My home was a retreat from the city, and I had nature and quiet around me most of the time. It was the second house I had bought since I started at that company, the first having been a new-construction home in a Denver suburb. I had two pickup trucks, the second being a new Nissan Titan with all the bells and whistles. That allowed me to let my daughters use my other truck as they needed, and I enjoyed being able to do that.




I had a lot of other creature comforts as well. From a material point of view, my life had never been better. And I was able to travel and see new places, mostly in conjunction with my work. It all seemed pretty good. But something was missing.

The biggest part of that something was probably what led me to take a chance on the dating website that discovered me while preparing for Kazakhstan: loneliness. I had been living alone, without a love in my life, for too long. We men don’t like to admit such weaknesses, but there it was; it’s hard to deny that it was a big factor.

But there was more to it than that. Between 2001 and the end of 2003, I had been involved in a difficult and, at times, nasty environmental cleanup project outside of Chicago. For the final six months of the project, I had become the sole onsite manager from my company’s side.

Dealing with the people around the project, particularly the residents and the local politicians was absolutely terrible. Most of the people were just looking for ways to extort money from our client, a large utility company, and the politicians were using every means possible, truthful or not, to castigate the utility company and advance their own political careers.

That area in and around Chicago was (and remains) completely controlled by the Democratic party, and we were at the mercy of liberal politicians. I learned firsthand how nasty and downright evil they can be. At the end, I was exhausted and very cynical.

For the next several years, I got more involved in some South American mining projects, which seemed great. But again, politics and other factors intruded to sap my enthusiasm for the projects. It seemed as though all we did was create feasibility studies, but we never got on the ground to actually build anything. And during this time we had some very bad internal incidents that jaded my feelings about the company. It had become time for me to do something else.

Something Different


Coming to Kyiv ten years ago was not just a desperate attempt to find love; I was also moved by the sense of adventure. I was going to Ukraine, a place that used to be part of the dreaded Soviet Union. In a previous life as a Navy intelligence analyst, the USSR had been my primary target, and going there was beyond impossible. But in 2006, there I was. It was a fantastic adventure.

When I had that feeling on the bus that I could live there, I paid attention to it. Being at that “need for change” point in my life, I wondered what I might do in such a place as Ukraine. I didn’t think too seriously about it at that moment, but I kept it in the back of my mind as I returned to Colorado and went about my project management work.

After the trip, I continued to correspond with my guide, and those e-mails fed my thought process about making a life change. More and more, I knew that I needed to do something different. A few months later, in May or June, I had a lengthy online chat with the owner of the translation company in Kharkiv that had provided the guide for me. I wanted to know what I might do for work if I came to Ukraine and wondered what she knew about teaching English there. I had a vision of a simpler life in which I would write and teach English.

In the course of the conversation, we discussed working together within the framework of the company she had been trying to build, expanding it and registering it in the United States. We would become business partners. In addition to writing and teaching, I would help manage and market this company; we would grow it as a translation and interpreting company focused on business and tourist clients. At that time, it looked like Ukraine was poised to be an emerging market for such services.

Also, I would continue my business writing and editing work, but on a freelance basis, and we would fold it into the overall offerings of the new company. It all sounded pretty good, and I began making concrete plans.

The Result


That talk led to another trip to Ukraine at the end of 2006 during which we set further plans and organized a team. It also led to my resigning from the project management company. It was a very amicable resignation, and I continued to do work for them, and for some other local companies, as an independent contractor for several years.

In early 2007, some cracks began to show in our business partnership, but I had made my choices, and there was no looking back. In May of 2007, I came back to Ukraine to spend a month working together on the business, which I had registered in Colorado, and to do some business writing workshops at several local universities.



Later that summer, I sold my house in the mountains. It was a sad moment to pack up and drive away from my beautiful refuge, but I was now headed in a new and different direction, and it wasn’t financially possible to keep the house at the same time. A few months later, in September, I rented my first long-term apartment in Kharkiv, and by May of 2008 I had become a full-time resident.

And the rest, as they say, is history.

The Years Since


There have been a lot of ups and downs over the years that I have lived here. I’ve experienced personal highs and lows, and I’ve seen the country go through enormous convulsions. But both Ukraine and I seem to be surviving.

When I first arrived in 2006, Ukraine was in the second year of the Yushchenko government. He was the president who had been elected during the Orange Revolution of late 2004, beating the kleptocrat Viktor Yanukovich. There were high hopes that the Yushchenko government would rein in the thieving oligarchs, reform the country’s corrupt institutions, and bring real democracy to Ukraine. But even by the time I arrived, people were starting to lose faith.

As it turned out, the Yushchenko government was a failure, mainly due to infighting between his camp and the camp of his Orange Revolution partner, then Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko. As a result, the arch-kleptocrat Yanukovich won the presidential election in January 2010, and “thug” government began to return. “Tax police” raided businesses to exact bribes, and a whole slew of shady government authorities got rich from the public coffers.



At the end of 2013, people had had enough, and in November, a small protest movement began on the Maidan in Kyiv. It became known as Euromaidan, and by February 2014, after the killing of 100 protesters by the government, democratic forces swept Yanukovich and his cronies out of office. A caretaker government took control while new elections could be organized, and a few months later, the current president, Petro Poroshenko, took office.

In the meantime, Russia, which had long pulled the strings on Yanukovich, began to move against the new Ukrainian government in early 2014. First, they took control of Crimea and then annexed it after a trumped-up referendum. Then they set about creating trouble in eastern Ukraine in concert with the existing criminal element in that region. That trouble took hold in Donetsk and Lugansk and evolved into the war that has been ongoing since the middle of 2014. For many months, there was a real fear that Russia would stage a full invasion of Ukraine. We were very nervous.

I saw firsthand in March of 2014 how Russian provocateurs tried to foment upheaval in Kharkiv. Thousands of Russians had come into the city on March 1st to stir up locals who supported Russia over their own government. I personally witnessed a scene in which tens of thousands of people crowded Kharkiv’s main square and angrily egged on thugs who were beating Euromaidan supporters. It was ugly.



We all worried about Kharkiv going the same way as Donetsk, especially with Russian military units only 30 kilometers away across the border. But, thankfully, nothing materialized, and Kharkiv has remained relatively safe and very Ukrainian. Still, we all know that Russia is not far away, and one day it could all come crashing down.

And the Economy


When I arrived in Kyiv for the first time in 2006, the currency exchange rate was about five hryvnias to the dollar. As an American with dollars, everything seemed remarkably cheap. When the worldwide financial crisis hit in late 2008, the exchange rate jumped briefly to 10 to one, and then settled down to an average of about eight hyrvnias to one dollar. It stayed that way for about four years, and we were all able to live with that, and despite inflation, the cost of living was still pretty good overall.

But in early 2014, it all came undone. The exchange rate shot up quickly: 12 to one, then climbing to 15 to one, and then past 20 to one. It settled down again for a while, but the news of Ukraine’s failing economy the past months caused the rate to spike again, and the rates have been in the range of 26 or 27 hyrvnias to one dollar. Quite a change from when I first arrived.



But the currency exchange rate isn’t the only problem. Ukraine’s economic output since the beginning of 2014 has plummeted due to lack of industrial production in the warring eastern region. As a result, Ukraine has been unable to pay its debts, and inflation has skyrocketed. Food prices have risen multiple times, and energy prices have gone through the roof. Because I and other people working in IT get paid on a dollar basis, we do all right. But for millions of others, especially older people living on meager government pensions, it’s very difficult.

Once again, Ukraine sits at the edge of economic and political disaster. Infighting is tearing the government apart, and it appears to be only a matter of time before a key member of the post-Euromaidan government, Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk, is forced out. That will fracture the governing coalition. It all seems like just more of the same.

When I first arrived, and for some years thereafter, most people I talked with were not thinking seriously about leaving the country. There were some who wanted to emigrate, but most had the notion of making Ukraine better. In the past year or so, however, I have encountered far more people who have given up and decided their lives would be better in Western Europe or North America. These days, I have a lot of former students and a few good friends who are now living elsewhere.

My Ten Years


The business we had planned, Nova Mova, failed. The financial crisis of 2008-09 had a lot to do with that: it became very hard to get client work. But also, it turned out that my business partner was extremely dishonest and incompetent. By early 2010, the company was no more.

But in the meantime, I had cultivated a good body of work as an English teacher. It started with doing speaking clubs at a local language school, and before long, I had individuals asking for private lessons. In the fall of 2008, I was invited to come several times a week to give speaking clubs at a local software development company, EPAM Systems – the company at which I work full-time now.

I added another large IT company, Global Logic, to my list of work in the fall of 2009, and my schedule was further filled out with private students. At the end of 2009, I dropped the language school and became focused on providing teaching services to IT companies and private students. Soon I had more work than I could handle. I wasn’t writing as much as I had planned, but I was doing a LOT of teaching.

More important, I think, I was growing. I was changing as a person and developing as a teacher. New ideas came to me – ways to more directly help the students I had with the kinds of business English skills they actually needed. After decades of different kinds of work, I had really found my niche. I was doing what I was meant to do.

Now I work full-time for EPAM, which has grown to more than 1,000 employees in Kharkiv alone, and more than 4,000 in Ukraine. It keeps me very busy, and with that level of work, I've had to cut back to just a few private students. But I enjoy what I do – something I have not always been able to say about past jobs.

Living in Eastern Europe has afforded me opportunities to travel that I wouldn’t have had otherwise. I’ve made several trips to Switzerland to visit my daughter and her family, which has been a real joy. I’ve also been able to see a bit of Italy, France, Denmark, Austria and Hungary. Last year I took a real resort vacation to the south of Turkey. And I am still thinking about making a return to Ireland someday soon. All of that has been great.

Throughout these ten years of my Ukrainian life, I’ve had a number of special friends and unique acquaintances. And I’ve built a LOT of memories. There are a couple of people here I would count among the best friends I have ever had in my life, and if I hadn’t come, I would never have met them.

In these years I’ve also felt the hope of love and the sting of heartbreak. I still live alone; that hasn’t changed. Perhaps this points out that this kind of relationship is something I’m just not meant to have in this life. Maybe it’s just a tough lesson of karma. Who knows?

Maybe it’s more related to the one thing about living here that perhaps does not fit: age. For all of these years, I’ve been an older man living among much younger people. My friends and acquaintances are all many years younger. I know no one over 40 and very few over 35. Very often, I find myself wishing I was a lot younger; lately I’ve thought about that a lot. But I am not  and there it is.

But all of that aside, my life here has been good. I sometimes reminisce about the house in the mountains and listening to the sweet, calming sounds of a Colorado forest on a warm summer day. But aside from that, I have no regrets. I am where I am meant to be, around people I am meant to be with, doing what I am meant to do. I think a lot of people would have trouble honestly saying the same.

The Future?


Maybe I shouldn’t try to look ahead for now. I’ve thought a number of times over the past four or five years that I probably should leave. But I am still here. Maybe that's because I've been not ready – or afraid – to make another change. Or maybe it's because on some level I still feel like I belong here. I'm not sure. 

I really was primed to quit Ukraine after a series of bad events in 2013, but then someone came along late that year who made me want to stay and see what might happen. The jury is still out on that, but I’m not quite ready to pull up stakes and move on. (UPDATE: The jury came in, and nothing good came of it.)

And I have great work now. There are challenges, and sometimes I feel like pulling my hair out (if I had any to pull) over corporate bureaucracy and such. But still, I find myself most days feeling pretty good about what I am doing. I’ve finally gotten myself to start doing some serious writing on a book. Again it’s all good, and it might be for naught if I give up on Ukraine now.

But there is that urge to change. It’s a part of me. Maybe I need to leave, or maybe I just need to make some other kind of big life change without going anywhere. I don’t know the answer to that yet, but I do realize that I am overdue to make some kind of big change. So, either way, I guess some big things are still in the offing.

All I know for sure is that my arrival in this country 10 years ago was not an accident: there was a purpose behind it. The life I’ve lived since then, including the very hard parts, has been the life I’ve needed to live. And I am glad for every moment of it.

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