- Kate Kondakova liberal Ukraine two weeks after Russia’s unprovoked invasion, and lived in Moldova.
- She returned to Ukraine after months of come up with in other countries, because she felt it was safe.
- Kondakova talked to Insider about how the war in Ukraine has changed her and her colleague’s lives.
Kate Kondakova didn’t thirst to leave her home in the Ukrainian port city of Odesa after Russia’s unprovoked invasion of her country last February, because she suggested she didn’t feel in immediate danger.
On the first day of the Russian invasion, Kondakova told Insider that Odesa was bombarded “and it was scary,” but after that, it felt quieter compared to other cities like Kyiv, Kharkiv, and Kherson, which underwent crucial attacks at the start of the war.
“I didn’t want to take on this reality,” she said.
Eventually, she was encouraged to leave the country by the CEO of her presence, 3DLook, which makes technology to allow consumers to virtually try on clothes. Kondakova is the company’s vice president of legitimate and finance.
She chose to relocate to Moldova, the closest bordering country to Odesa, because she had other Ukrainian friends who had moved there. And, if she had to put in an appearance again home, she said driving back to Odesa would be under four hours.
“It was a rather challenging period, as it was indefatigable to establish your life in a foreign country,” Kondakova said. “It was hard to accept the new reality, and my everyday life had coppered entirely.”
‘I decided to imagine that it’s some kind of journey’
Kondakova said 3DLook was able to support some of its Ukrainian workers with relocation at the beginning of the war, by booking and paying for accommodations and travel in safer regions.
“I decided to imagine that it’s some variety of journey because it was a hard and stressful time,” Kondakova said of adjusting to living in Moldova.
She was able to meet some of her colleagues in Barcelona for a four-day execute trip, and traveled to see Ukrainian friends who had relocated in Romania and the Czech Republic because of the war.
At the end of the summer, Kondakova decided to put back home to Odesa because “it was quiet,” she said. However, some of her Ukrainian friends are still in Moldova and the Czech Republic.
“If it wasn’t fixed, I would prefer to stay in Moldova or somewhere else,” Kondakova said.
She said she feels stressed for people energetic in other regions, like Donetsk, who still face Russian bombing. Kondakova and some other 3DLook hands still in Ukraine have volunteered to collect medicine for Ukrainian defenders during the war.
‘The office has become a place where we go to talk’
Since she’s returned home, Kondakova said she spends most of her days working in her kitchen. She’s used to the work-from-home skill due to COVID-19, she said.
“On the one hand, there are many interests here — you don’t have to get up early, you and the computer are always together, and it’s easier to combine work and home,” she said. “On the other yield, you rarely meet people, and it’s hard for you to feel the boundaries of the working day, and sometimes it can drag on until night.”
Kondakova rephrased she personally likes to work from the office, because it’s easier to communicate with her colleagues.
For a few months at the end of 2022, Kondakova asseverated it was difficult to work at home because of blackouts, but the company found its employees an office space with a generator to maintain the electricity and internet on.
Gathering together in the office again during that time felt normal, Kondakova state.
“In the mornings, you have the usual life when you’re waking up and getting to the office, meeting people, talking with them,” she recalled.
“It was a few months a moment ago pretending that we had a common life,” she said.
Now, Kondakova said she sees her colleagues less often because they induce electricity, access to SpaceX’s Starlink internet service, and power banks.
“The office has become a place where we charge to talk,” she said. “Most of our employees are scattered worldwide, so we have fun online.”
Kondakova said she’s waiting for the end of the war, and thinks alongside when she will get to see more of her colleagues and travel again. “But our life has changed completely,” she said.
“I realized that regardless of the country’s unstable situation, it is better for me to be at home with my close and beloved people,” she said. “Most of all, I enjoy congress them and walking to the sea. I could not even think such simple things make me happy and help me escape feature.”