08 December 2012

Hannukah Miracles abound...

1)our paper, which I am second author on and has been in review/revision/review FOREVER was accepted by Neuron yesterday. This is the paper we went to Philly to do insanely hard experiments for (I think 8 days of recording, 4 cells from 30 animals!).  

2) My hands, after two weeks of unexplained stiffness and distracting levels of pain, a doctor's visit where they took approximately half my blood for testing, and a lot of hyperventilating while googling bone cancer and lupus, have spontaneously healed. Ok, so I know they are not healed and whatever is wrong is unlikely to just disappear, but today I can move them and the pain is minimal and I am making cookies

05 October 2012

cook ALL the things

SO my grant is turned in to the office of sponsored projects, hooray! That means that I am continually getting emails telling me my references are formatted incorrectly or my facilities page also needs to include  information about the institutional environment, but different information than what goes on the institutional environment page. Annoying, but I guess I am glad that someone is checking this stuff.  But for the most part, this horrible thing is done.   I'm pretty happy with what I turned in, and really excited about the project I proposed. I was ready to quit science forever on monday after my fifth night in a row with less than four hours of sleep, but I have been assured that the whole process gets easier.
Anyways, the past three months have been completely insane and I am ready for a break.  This weekend, in addition to doing a lot of laundry and cleaning, I am going to cook all sorts of things:

Veggie Stock!

Butternut Squash and Cider Soup

Tangy Chickpea salad

pumpkin-risotto

Pumpkin bread

13 September 2012

ROAR, part II

Two and a half weeks to go on the grant, and I have bronchitis. Progressed from sore throat to strained rib muscles in four days.  This is not surprising, as I have never had any sort of major academic or professional hurdle without being deathly ill- I was sick (several times with bronchitis, so this is a familiar feeling!) or on crutches for every single exam period in college. ALL EIGHT OF THEM.  I missed an Organic chemisry midterm because I was in the hospital with  kidney infection.  I had the flu for my qualifying exam.   I think my thesis defense was the only time I have ever been healthy for a test.  I thought that was a sign I was over this particular quirk, but alas, just a fluke.

02 September 2012

ROAR

Here is a great time for your home internet to go out, possibly because your terrible asshole neighbors have been stealing internet from you for a year, and no, Verizon can't come out sooner than next tuesday:  A week  before you have to send a draft of a grant to your boss before you leave for five poorly timed days in California!
Now I get to not only spend 95% of my waking time writing, but I get to do it in the lab! Yay!

15 July 2012

yiiiiiikes

1.  Summer in Providence is perfect. There is the bay and the beach and endless drinks on restaurant patios. It is blissful and I have such great friends to spend it with.

2. The lab is so busy this summer! We have FOUR undergrads and a high schooler. Only one is officially assigned to me, but the other postdocs in the lab are preoccupied getting themselves off to new jobs, and the grad student is a little unaware ("so when she comes and sits by my rig, I am supposed to teach her things? "), so I am generally their point person for ordering/borrowing keys/experiment planning/freaking out when they don't get fields.   They are fun to have around and as pretty much everyone who has met me knows, I can be a bit of a mama bear, and love teaching anyone anything. But...my productivity is definitely down.
2a. Things my out-of-this world undergrad can do on her own after a month: stereotaxic injections (into the VTA of pups no less: not an easy target!), tissue collection, ELISAs, genotyping, a few different behavioral tasks.  She is almost done with her first figure's worth of data. When I'm still a post-doc in ten years, I'm pretty sure I'll be working for her.  
2b.An incomplete list of things our super-eager high schooler thinks are "the coolest ever": PCR, the thermocycler, the electrode puller, me, the vibratome, the paper flowers I hung above the rig, fluorescent cells.  When she sits and watches me patch, she gives me feedback on every cell "Oh, that one has a huge opening. Super good job...why did the line fall off the screen?"

3.  I made all my travel arrangements to go to the big easy for SFN in October. Super excited to see everyone!

4. I am writing big huge grant which is due to the grants office in 76 days.  It would fund me for two more years in my current lab and then three years of my own lab (!) I am estimating I have an approximately 2.8% chance of actually getting it. 
4a. I have exactly one paragraph written. And an outline for rest of it, most of which is in my head.
4b. I think I decided to completely change direction of the second half of it? But I need to talk to my boss about it and I won't see her again until a week from tomorrow, by which time there will be 68 days left to write. Or 67. COUNTING IS HARD, even for an Abbacus.

5. Three weeks before the grant is due, my cousin is getting married in LA. So, a trip to california, which may or may not be spent in a hotel room, writing, depending on how far I am.

6. The first two weeks in August, I am teaching a course in my school's summer pre-college program.  I am doing this because a) it pays ludicrously well and b) my coworker got a lot of positive feedback over teaching these courses when he was on the market for a faculty job. SO. Two weeks, three hours a day, me and 26 high schoolers, talkin' about brains
5a. 26 is the current registration. It will probably go up. They are going to eat me alive.

7. The weekend before I teach, that is, a little less than two weeks from now,  I go to Buffalo to see the lovely Johanna get married, and to visit my friend Allison and her babies!

8. And this week, starting in a few hours, I go to Philadelphia to do some science. Crucial experiments that are the only big thing reviewers asked for when we submitted this paper. Technically challenging recordings from animals other people have been working on for months. With a coworker I sometimes clash with. NO PRESSURE.
8a.  I am sort of excited to live in a hotel for a week because it is going to be a billion degrees on the east coast and hotels have spectacular A/C. My apartment, on the other hand, has no A/C.


So, that's what's happening.  None of it is bad, per se, it's just a lot of stuff, in a short time. And while it's a short time to get everything I need to do done, it's also sort of a long time to be under so much pressure. I feel like once I step on the train, I'm on some unstoppable track, and there's no getting off. My life goes completely out of my control for a while.
All of this is long way to say that a) I might be a total hermit for a while and b) come October, i'm getting really drunk


09 June 2012

Hypotheticals

How many days in a row does one have to skip lunch and eat nachos for dinner before it stops being an indulgence after a busy day and becomes a habit?  How many grown-up points would one lose if this did become a habit?

Is it better if the nacho dinner is accompanied by a gin and tonic?

no?

07 May 2012

In Which my sister and I google ourselves


Elizabeth 
10:33 PM
it's a comfort in this margaret atwood world

me
10:33 PM
...

Elizabeth 
10:34 PM
that the internet is totally wrong about me.
you on the other hand
will be the first against the wall.
putting on airs

me
10:34 PM
that I haven't been kidnapped and forced to bear children for the barren wife of a general?

Elizabeth 
10:34 PM
well, that too.

30 March 2012

27 March 2012

Catch up time

Ok, catch up time. I've done lots of cool stuff lately! Travels, parties, teaching, science! Adventures abound and sleep is on the minimal side of adequate!

Most of what keeps me busy is working. I will say this: Being a postdoc is definitely better than being a grad student.  But it is not easier.  Don't get me wrong-I'm much happier than I was for most of grad school, and a big part of that is that I now work for a reasonable person and have time to do things like exercise and socialize  and visit my family and take daytrips to wineries with my friends on weekends.   But day-to-day, the responsibilities are greater and more complex. Administrative tasks grow, there's more supervising and training others, there is more writing and thinking things up on your own, and when opportunities come along to teach a course, or guest lecture or give a talk, of course you take them because it's a competitive business and early on you need all the opportunities and goodwill you can get. All of this while still producing data! Good data and lots of it! It can be exhilarating, but also completely overwhelming.
Science chugs along-a paper I'm second author on goes out whenever our collaborators get back to us with final changes. I'm getting some solid data for my own paper. This one isn't terrible exciting-nuts and bolts and mechanisms of things. Once it is done, I will be starting some flashy new things-a little riskier, but I am super excited about it! I'm finishing up my first of three (3) (!!!!!) grants this year-this one is for little internal pilot funds, the second is for a somewhat bigger one or two year project, the third is a huge career-defining make-or-break NIH grant that looms like a monster in my mind.  I love thinking it through-I'm starting to see a niche for me, where I might fit with a lab of my own, what direction those first few years of independence will take It's scary though, to put so much effort into planning for a career that is such a long shot-I'm happy to call myself above average as a scientist, but "above average" is nowhere close to a guarantee in the current climate.
I'm teaching this semester in the continuing ed program.  I proposed a class on stress and the brain, it was accepted into the catalog, and the minimum number of students signed up, so the class went forward. I'm having a blast with it-my students are very diverse in their background, but without an exception they are incredibly bright and engaged. I think this is a great way to get teaching experience, and I am (hopefully!) improving a lot as a teacher over the semester.  Plus I think running my own course from the ground up-designing the syllabus and picking out the materials myself-has been much more valuable to me that TAing someone else's course would be.  I have a pre-college course on schedule this summer.  We'll see how that goes-I can see myself having much more trouble with 25 teenagers than with 8 adults.

Of course, I am also keeping very busy outside of work and teaching and science. I've got great friends here.  I think I spend more time at the bar in any given week here than I did in all of grad school.  That's a good thing :) I'll (maybe?) have some updates with pictures in the next few days on my recent adventures and travels with my sister.

I hope to update the blog more-to keep in touch, keep record of what I do, and to practice writing in a non-sciency form. I'm always promising that, though...

10 March 2012

In which my sister and I discuss casseroles


Elizabeth 

I am going to see you soooo soon!

me
12:29 PM
we are going to have
epic amounts of fun
I got:
twizzlers
me
12:29 PM
roast beef
three jalapenos and goat cheese for shakshuka
doritos and chips

Elizabeth 
12:29 PM
those things are going to make an epic casserole
me
12:30 PM
no, it is new england
me
12:30 PM
not the midwest

Elizabeth 
12:30 PM
in the midwest, we would call it a hotdish.
twizzler roast beef jalapeno dorrito

me
12:30 PM
we don't need to cover everything we eat with cream of mushroom soup and cheese and bake the hell out of it
Elizabeth 
12:31 PM
except we would exclude the jalapenos

me
12:31 PM
well, obvs

Elizabeth 
12:31 PM
and call it "enchilada hot dish"

13 February 2012

29: analysis

SO I am 29 today! Life is super crazy, or has been for a few weeks and is now calming down? Maybe? Probably not. Anyways, it's my birthday, things are good, I am happy. Just a little too crazy for a real update at the moment.
At this point in my life, I would say I am mediocre at being an adult, an adequate scientist, a terrible cat keeper, and shit at updating this blog. But y'all, I am really good at cake.



*made them for a friend's graduation party. Not for my own birthday!

07 January 2012

I'll take it

Last year at this time, I was suffering through the first of approximately eighty seven blizzards to hit Rhode Island in January.

This year, it is 61 degrees and sunny as hell. We've only had a brief wet dusting of snow. I like this version of winter much better.

And with that, I'm going outside:)


01 January 2012

Read ALL The Books

I read 65 books in 2011 (75 if you count the teenager books I have read a thousand times, the 7 harry potters and 3 hunger games. But let's not count those, to do such would only encourage this behavior). A lot of them were really good! My top five for the year were probably: Middlesex, Swamplandia!, The Tiger's Wife, Galore, and Bel Canto. And Year of the Flood.  And Night Circus. And Faithful Place.  And State of Wonder. OH and Vaclav and Lena. So, top ten. Those are the ones that stand out, at least, that I would like to read again.
I'll continue keeping a reading list next year-I've already started on a good one! I'm setting 70 books (not including repeats, unless it is for sister book club).


65. The Emperor of Lies Steven Sem-Sandberg   Of course I finish out the year with a book about the holocaust. This book chronicles life in the Lodz ghetto. It's good-somehow draws you in despite a certain sparseness of the language. Very depressing, because unlike most books about historical tragedies that focus on those who survived despite the odds, this one sticks pretty close to the odds and I think every major character you meet dies. Spoiler alert?
64. Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children Ransom Riggs
63. The Tiger in the Well Phillip Pullman
62. The Shadow in the North Phillip Pullman
61. The Ruby in the Smoke Phillip Pullman These three are a trilogy of mysteries set in Victorian London. They're fine if you like that kind of thing
60. The Book Thief Maurice Zusak A book for teenagers, about Nazi Germany, narrated by Death. I cried at multiple points, obviously.
59. The Poisonwood Bible Barbara Kingsolver   I read this for sister book club. Even though I've read it three or four times before, I still find new things in it, and find Kingsolver's exquisite language able to move me
58. Nightwoods Charles Frazier
57. The Sisters Brothers Patrick DeWitt   I've never really read westerns before, but I liked this one!
56. When She Woke Hillary Jordan Great Premise, poorly executed
55. Faith Jennifer Haigh
54. Night Circus Erin Morgenstern  I waited forever to get this from the library, and I loved it! It's so richly imagined and such a sweet story
53. Death in the City of Light David King Really fascinating book about a serial killer in Nazi-Occupied Paris. I'm not usually one for non-fiction, but I liked this one
--------------------------------------------------------------
52. Vaclav and Lena Hayley Tanner
51. The Submission, Amy Waldman
50. Divergence Veronica Roth
49. Fragile Lisa Unger
48. Rules of Civility Amor Towles
47. Before I go to Sleep SJ Watson
46. The Hangman's Daughter Oliver Pötzsch
45. The Satanic Verses Salman Rushdie.
44. Everything is Illuminated Jonathan Safran Foer
43. Love that dog/ Hate that cat, Sharon Creech
42 . Bel Canto Ann Patchett
41.The Snowman, Jo Nesbo
40. State of Wonder, Ann Patchett
39. In the Garden of Beasts, Eric Larson
38. The Redbreast, Jo Nesbo
37. Caleb's Crossing , Geraldine Brooks
36. Nemesis, Jo Nesbo
35. The Devil's Star, Jo Nesbo
34. The History of Love,Nicole Krauss
33. East of Eden, John Steinbeck.
32. The Crucible, Arthur Miller
31. A Discovery of witches, Deborah Harkness
30. Cutting For Stone, Abraham Verghese
29. 22 Brittania Road, Amanda Hodgkinson
28. The Tiger's wife, Tea Obreht
27. Swamplandia!, Karen Russell
26. The Screwtape Letters, CS Lewis
25. Galore, Michael Crummey
24. Comedy in a Minor Key, Hans Kielson
23.Middlesex, Jeffrey Eugenides 22. Great House Nicole Krauss
21. The Children's Book A. S. Byatt.
20. Room Emma Donaghue
19. The Lady Matador's Hotel Cristina Garcia
18. The Lonely Polygamist, Brady Udall
17. Disgrace, J.M. Coetzee
16. The Wordy Shipmates Sarah Vowell
15. The Warmth of Other Suns: The epic story of America's great Migration, Isabelle Wilkerson
14. Little Bee Chris Cleave
13 Fool Christopher Moore
12. A Dirty Job Christopher Moore
10. Lolita Vladimir Nabakov
9. Super Sad True Love Story Gary Shteyngart
8. The Swan Thieves, Elizabeth Kostova.
7.Year of the Flood, Margaret Atwood.
6. Faithful Place, Tana French.
5. The Possessed: Adventures with Russian Books and the People who Read them, Elif Batuman.
4. Purgatorio, Dante Alighieri.
3. The Scarpetta Factor, Patricia Cornwell.
2. Bite Me, Christopher Moore.
1. Devil in the White City Eric Larson.