Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Moving!

Please note, I am moving my domain to wordpress and you can now find me at http://theseedofscience.wordpress.com/.

Thanks so much for reading!

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Insight into The Atoms Within Us

I would like to take some time to talk about some books that have inspired me and are continuing to inspire me as I'm cutting my path in this life. For my first installment, I'll be writing about Ernest Borek's The Atoms Within Us.

I first encountered this book on a whim in a used bookstore at a sparsely-occupied new shopping center in Espoo, Finland. The shopping center itself was fresh and new, full of promise and potential - besetting nostalgic feelings of a burgeoning economy and above all, hope. The tiny bookshop boasted an assortment of Finnish and Swedish books and also had a meager section of about three half-meter shelves of books written in English. I had four books in my possession to read for the almost two month stay we had planned, but I still yearned for more, rationalizing that I could fit one more book among my belongings and figuring if I found something in my taste (usually non-fiction science) among these staggering odds, it must be fate (I like to entertain the idea of fate every so often, as the thought of it is so grandiose and synchronicities sometimes just line up so well. I don't live my life like it is pre-destined, but still so, there may be some pattern to life and time beyond the depths of human understanding that I am still hesitant to dismiss entirely). I ended up pulling from the shelves a rather dated popular-science book on biochemistry priced at 2. The back cover boasted "...a careful and correct picture within the limits it sets for itself, of the state of modern biochemistry and how it came to be what it is." I am a sucker for attempts to wrap subjects into neat little boxes, explaining them clearly and precisely. So, although this particular version was published in 1963, I knew I had to dig in.

My favorite kind of book is a beat-up, well-loved, good chunk of non-fiction ... the kind where you can't help but annotate the pages with scribbles of diagrams and questions and notes, where you dog-ear the pages AND underline the text in a wild frenzy of understanding and inspiration. I read the majority of this book, sunbathing, pen-in-hand on a grass beach on the western neighborhood island of Helsinki, Lauttasaari. And while this book touched on many subjects - the staggering role of cooperating enzymes in our existence, vitamin's role in the functioning of cell biology, cosmic radiation and "heavy isotopes", amino acids, genes, the circulatory system - what made it special was it's anecdotal nature, weaving the history of science and scientific discovery so seamlessly into textbook data about the nature of the chemical interactions in the microbiological world. Borek's style was almost an outright invitation to try science first hand, but still with a warning about how to "rise to the top," with the age-old comparison of the genius of science and art:

"This does not imply that there is no genius among experimental scientists. It merely means a different manifestation of genius; in the field of science, genius accomplishes what lesser minds would accomplish later. Creation in the arts is quite different. It is inconceivable that anyone but Shakespeare or Beethoever might have brought forth those very same plays and symphonies. But Newton and Leibnitz independently and almost simultaneously integrated the same mathematical abstractions into differential calculus. The artist extracts his creation almost solely from the riches of his own mind; the scientist evolves in his mind a pattern from phenomena which he and others have pried out from observations of our physical universe. Genius among scientists can be measured in years - the number of years that he is ahead of his contemporaries."

Borek is essentially saying that the scientist is at the mercy of time, in terms of his/her genius. Scientific genius is a race against your colleagues, where being a leader in your field is just as important as being an expert. This is something I haven't really fully understood until now even, going back and reading passages I'd underlined. And rather than discourage me against staggering odds, it's ignited within me a confidence of how I've always lived on the borderline between introvert and leader.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Things Lost in the Fire - A New Life List

This seems as good a place as any to start a new life list. My old one was lost in the great macbook explosion of 2004 and I've always just thought that I might haphazardly stumble across it on a random blog or email. Well, I've searched high and low and it is time to start a new one. Although, it really would have been satisfying to cross "pet a wild squirrel," "swim in a hot spring," "get a bachelor's" and "run a 10k" off of the list :S

So, without further adieu, I present: LIFE LIST #2
(bear with me folks, I'm aiming quite high here and I expect to be updating this quite frequently)
  • Write a popular-science book
  • See the aurora borealis
  • Explore the deep sea in a submarine
  • Create a scholarship
  • Swim across the Chesapeake Bay
  • Run a half marathon
  • Run a marathon
  • Hike Angel's Landing in Zion National Park
  • Learn to field-dress wild animals
  • Take a tour of CERN
  • Make someone's life easier than mine by teaching them something I had to learn the hard way (this is more of a tally than a cross off)
  • Win a Nobel Prize
  • Go somewhere cold enough that my eyelashes freeze
  • Visit Antarctica

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

And Now We Wait...

"Life was always a matter of waiting for the right moment to act." - Paulo Coelho

Okay, I'm just going to admit it - I'm terrified. This waiting is so very difficult. I want to prepare and plan and start my academic life. But, the bottom line is, it still may not happen. I know the best I can do is stay positive and hope that my personal statement and references make me stand out. I feel like I'm kind of "faking it til I make it" as far as confidence that I will be the one they possibly select out of four. There is this crazy balancing act I seem to be attempting with how often I can bug people who I've tried to get advice from. I just seem to have no idea what I am doing. I'm applying to an internship at a marine biochemical institute to try to get some lab experience should I get in. I'm not sure how this is going to work, given I work close to an hour away and a 8-4:30pm schedule. I may be willing to work several nights of the week and on weekends in addition to my schedule, but I doubt those who work there will. I want to email people again and ask them what they did in the months before graduate school to prepare them - what books did they read? internships? seminars?

I'm also attending the Mid-Atlantic Malacologists meeting at the Delaware Museum of Natural History on March 31st. I feel like this is a networking opportunity for my potential advisors, but I feel awkward emailing them to ask them if there is anything they'd want me to inquire about. Is this tacky? Is it brown nosing? I feel like I don't have anyone to ask these questions... there isn't a single person in my family who went to graduate school, no one among my friends in the sciences (save one I am continually bugging), and my professors from undergrad seem constantly busy. Should I just bite the bullet and shoot out a few emails or will I be shooting myself in the foot? Am I meant to struggle through all of this alone as some sort of test of my judgment or do most people have a mentor/support/guidance through the process?

I also plan to contact some professors at TU to see if I could be of assistance in their labs at all. I'll be working on my resume/cover letter today and tomorrow for the internship as well as to send some professors. Sometimes I just hope for someone to take pity on me and take me under their wing. I know I can do it alone, but I'd love to be on top of the curve for once instead of scrambling to figure everything out. I have the motivation! Let's do this!

Friday, February 3, 2012

It's Still Fantasy!

More waiting now. I received word from my advisor:

Great news…but one more step. You have not been offered a Taship yet, this will be decided by our GA committee sometime in the next month or so. So, the university has accepted you, but Biology has not made an offer yet. This does not mean that you cannot come; it just means that you do not yet have secured funding.

I do know there are quite a few applicants (I have 4 for my lab alone), that are pending, but I will try and keep you posted. Peter Houde is the chair of that committee, and he usually lets the faculty know about the ranking of the students after the committee meets (it also depends on how many slots we have open in the fall).

So this means I have some more waiting to do. I definitely jumped the gun with telling people, I think. Something felt amiss. Oh well. Now, I just have to stay positive and hope for the money. It's going to all come down to funding, so let's hope I have lots and lots of good karma from bad money luck in the past :) :)

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Is This The Real Life?

I've been (somewhat unofficially) accepted into my top PhD program! I received an email "congratulating me again" for my acceptance when that was the first I'd heard of any final decision. I waited a day or so to send an email asking what was the deal and got a response on Sunday that I had indeed been accepted and should be receiving mail within the next couple days. I still don't have any mail and I feel like my correspondence with my possibly-soon-to-be advisor is being put on hold until I get solid confirmation and hopefully word also from the other school to which I applied. All of my former professors told me that I need to visit the campuses before I make a final decision, but all I seem to want to do is just give a big resounding YES so that it is a done deal and I can start some serious planning. I am still not sure how to approach this with the program - what do I say next? I'm sure I will figure it out, as I've felt in the dark this entire process about communicating anyhow.

Honestly, this acceptance doesn't feel like a big deal, even though I KNOW it is, even though it was not something I could have imagined happening to me despite all of my hard work. I got into a PhD program!! It doesn't feel real and at the same time I am waiting for it all to blow up in my face. Driving home the other night, I had this overwhelming thought that something will have to go wrong for this to go right and at the time I thought I knew what that would be. I feel very burdened worrying for and assuring two minds that this move will be fabulous. A piece of my heart still lies in the desert and I know I will have no trouble finding it again - no matter what. I have pieces of myself spread out in many nooks of this world and I hope to keep finding places where my heart explodes in the abstraction that defines any given place. I've also surrendered a piece of myself to another soul and feel quite vulnerable in the stochasticity and comfort of such a fleshy depository. Maybe the solution is to move those feelings into reserves, to the same place where the desert and where Finland now reside and where the Eastern Shore will reside soon.

An adventure awaits me, a bonafied independent existence. Who am I kidding? I am absolutely thrilled. I guess my biggest fear is that I will lose that thrill or get my hopes too high and never make it out of here or to the life of discovery I've always dreamed of. Lord knows, I've tried to cut my path so many times, in so many ways, through so many places. It's all gotten me to here though and you better believe I'm going to run!

Monday, January 9, 2012

Hooray!!! & A Visit to the Delaware Museum of Natural History

All applications are IN! I turned in my choice school's application well ahead of time, but was still waiting on some materials to arrive with my application. So, when I received the email that my application was complete, I was more than relieved.
A floor display at the DMNH

I had some holiday leave from work that I had to take before January 12th, so I took that as a perfect opportunity to visit the Delaware Natural History Museum (DMNH). I certainly wish google maps told exact toll amounts because for the round-trip I spent $20 in tolls and probably around $30 in gas – I’m very thankful that I brought a larger sum of cash.

It was certainly an expensive, but worthwhile trip – especially with snowflakes greeting me at the rest station where I stopped briefly both ways.I was delighted to find bronze statues of an assortment of animals speckled around the museum and parking lot. Had I gone with a companion, I’m sure a photo-op would have been in order! Instead, I parked and walked through the doors into a lobby where a model giant squid (Architeuthis dux) hung overhead and a sign boasted one of the top ten largest mollusk collections in the United States. Walking to the reception desk, I had some fond nostalgia for my days working at the National Museum of Dentistry and some slight pain at the fact that it doesn’t look like it’s going to come through for a weekend job. I really miss working there sometimes – being behind the scenes of a museum. I didn’t know what to expect when I met the Curator of Mollusks, Dr. Liz Shea, but she promptly whisked me upstairs for a chat and behind-the-scenes tour of the DMNH. We chatted about committees, meetings, museums, DNA extractions, digitizing databases, and she showed me the tissue specimens. I really don't know where I'd be without people who take me under their wing in ways like this. I always feel so lost in this process. I am really looking forward to mentoring future students someday who are in my spot and giving them the guidance that's been so hard for me to find.