Wednesday, May 23, 2012

I've moved!

Hello to the probably very few readers that I have. My blog has moved to a different location. I will archive my posts from here to there (if I can figure that out).

http://chickadeesciencebot.blogspot.com/

Thanks for reading and I hope to see you on my new blog.

Erin

Thursday, February 23, 2012

We can go when we want to

The night is young and so am I
and we can dress real neat from our hats to our feet
and surprise 'em with a victory cry

It's the end of February but winter has been largely absent this year. Yesterday and today the temperature rose near 90! But then a cold front will come in tonight and it will only be in the 60's tomorrow. I am wearing shorts in February. February! I ventured up to Austin this afternoon for a hair cut so I stopped at Whole Foods, which is right down the street from the salon. Fresh fish for dinner! I also picked up some sweet potato bread (it's delicious!) and a smoothie called "pretty in pink". 

I have been busy writing my thesis and organizing then analyzing my data. I am going to a regional meeting next week where I will give a talk then I am giving a poster presentation at the end of March. My thesis defense will be the last week of March or the first week of April. I cannot believe that this is almost over. This flew by. Soon I will be a master. 

In the middle of a sweltering summer, I will begin a PhD program (and move) to Tampa. Along with Blake, the cats, the rats, and the snake. I answered an advertisement on an ecology board. Most days it all feels surreal; everything that I have done and will soon pursue. I feel like I am watching outside myself. I must admit that I am pleased with the person I am turning out to be. I will miss my dear friends that I have made here in central Texas. But, as the wise Dr. Suess said, "Don't cry because it's over; smile because it happened."

In other happenings, I am teaching two introductory organismal biology laboratory sections (both at 8 AM). One of my sections is full of well-mannered, calm, nice, and eager students. Approximately 1/3 of my other section are whiny and difficult. 

"This is TERRIBLE! Why do we have to count beads? This is so stupid!" say the young biology undergraduates. 

"OK, let's get some perspective people. Terrible would be like dodging machine gun bullets on our way to school. Or the recent violence in Syria. Conducting a simulation in class does not fall under terrible," I respond. 

"This is the worst lab. I don't see how any of this relates to evolution."

"Can I just cheat and grab the remaining blue beads so we can be done?"

"I HATE this lab! It sucks so much!"

"This is the most boring class EVER!"

The students banter on.

I take deep breaths and think about hot lattes and whiskey and reply, "Listen, first of all, you are in training so these simulations are necessary because they beautifully demonstrate key concepts you should learn. And, do you think that when you are a physician it's going to be like House, M.D.? News flash, your job will not always be exciting. Lastly, this is about 2 hours of your week so deal with it."

I projected annoyance and general bitchiness but I really tried not to react that way. I did not yell but at least replied with brazen comments. 18-20 year olds can be quite difficult. 

Thursday evening is already upon us and the weekend beckons. Guppy care is in the future followed by yoga. Maybe a morning bird walk around San Marcos thrown in. 

General relaxation. 

It's a leap year!



Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Cats like catnip and mice

Happy New Year!

I hope everyone had a wonderful holiday season. I was able to spend the holidays in Minnesota which was nice. We had a rare brown Christmas and an unusually warm last week of December. I spent time with the cutest puppy/ball of energy in the world. Oh Dilly (short for Dillinger) what a good boy you are!



Yesterday was Martin Luther King Jr. Day and my mom's birthday. Happy birthday, mom! Every Tuesday after MLK day (for the last 5 years) has meant the start of the spring semester. The streets of San Marcos were bustling with students and the Supple Science castle was once again full of human life. The temperature when I woke up this morning was an incredible 68 degrees F! When I was an undergraduate at the U MN, the first week of the semester was usually bitterly cold, like 5 degrees with a -10 windchill. Bundle up! But this, 68, humid and sunny, what a day! Since I spent 23 years in Minnesota, the climate in Texas still amazes me.

The Republican primaries are under way and we are left with Romney and "not-Romney" which has rotated around the GOP from Michele Bachmann, Herman Cain, Rick Perry, Newt Gingrich, Rick Santorum, and most recently in the New Hampshire, Ron Paul. The GOP debates continue with two within twelve hours of each other last weekend with the candidates tearing into each other and spouting falsehoods about President Obama and their own records. And let's not forget about the beast unleashed by the Supreme Court's Citizens United and the creation of the Super PAC. Now in 2012, our elections can be bought and sold the highest bidder! Besides this, the GOP has also been busy disenfranchising voters and controlling women's uterus's while not doing much to help the economy or put Americans back to work. But remember, their number 1 goal is to make sure Obama is a one-term president. What a year this should turn out to be. Must stock up on popcorn.

Happy birthday Betty White and Muhammad Ali! And happy belated birthday to Michelle Obama!

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

2011 Wrap Up

It's that time of year again where we deck the halls, eat too much, get our trees, our friends at Fox News have their yearly "War on Christmas" rants, and we ring in the new year. So, in that spirit, here is my commentary on 2011.

We started the year with the tragic shooting of a town meeting hosted by Arizona Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords. 2011 brought us "the protester" (Time Magazine's Person of the Year) with the Arab Spring and the on-going Occupy Wall Street protests, as well as similar protests, from New York's Zuccotti to Oakland to Tahrir Square . There was also the now infamous footage of our increasingly militarized police force pepper spraying students in the face while peacefully protesting. This incident in at UC Davis wasn't the only one; this has happened at Occupy protests all over the country.

Next year will bring a presidential election and so the fight for the chance to challenge President Obama has begun among the right. With the primary season about to go in early January in Iowa, the coverage of all the smearing and name-calling is in full swing. And how 'bout all those 13(!!) great Republican primary debates? There is a plethora of nonsense and false and bizarre statements that I probably cannot cover it all but here are the most memorable moments. Who could forget all the cheering about death of the uninsured and the death penalty, as well and Mitt's $10,000 bet to Rick Perry? Speaking of the death penalty, this was a hot topic this year with the execution of Troy Davis and an examination of Rick Perry's record.

Going into the primary season, Mitt Romney and Newt Gringrich (yes, I can't believe it either) are the current front runners but apparently Ron Paul could take Iowa. The circus may have just begun. And thanks to the Supreme Court's ruling that corporations are people and money equals free speech, the 2012 election season is going to be truly unprecedented in shenanigans. I'll have some popcorn.

Along with the multiple budget showdowns and the threat of government shutdown, 2011 has truly been a bizarre year in politics, but at least it gave comedians plenty of material.

Other lowhighlights in politics have been Rick Perry's "Strong" ad, Herman Cain's rapid rise and fall (sexual harassment allegations do not bid well for a potential presidential candidate), Michele Bachmann saying that God caused Hurricane Irene as a warning to curb spending in the U.S., Herman Cain's ridiculous 9-9-9 plan, hundreds of pieces of legislation restricting reproductive rights including a (thankfully defeated) personhood amendment in Mississippi that would grant fertilized eggs full rights as a person. Lastly, Obama's HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius overruled the FDA's recommendation that Plan B (emergency contraception) be available over-the-counter and those under 17 may purchase it without a prescription. Dear Mr. President, anti-choicers will never support you, no matter how many concessions you make on the reproductive rights front.

Other notable moments of 2011 was the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton, the last Harry Potter film was released, Osama bin Laden was killed by Navy SEALS, following a 2008 agreement (GW Bush) all of US troops will be withdrawn by the end of the year, and just recently, Kim Jong II died.

There was also Kim Kardashian's 70 something day marriage and the revelation that the Muppets are Communists. September 11, 2011 marked the 10th anniversary of the attack on the trade towers.

2011 was also the year of well-publicized murder trials of young women. Casey Anthony was acquitted and surprisingly Nancy Grace did not burst into flames (but she was pretty upset). Amanda Knox's murder conviction was overturned and she went home to Washington. Amy Winehouse died, joining the 27 club, Don't Ask Don't Tell was repealed and Steve Jobs died.

Penn State is amid a child abuse scandal involving former offensive coach Jerry Sandusky and the following riots by students after Joe Paterno was fired (which just may be the dumbest protest of the year) and there was the earthquake, tsunami and following disaster in Japan complete with a nuclear plant meltdown. We also had record breaking weather disasters here at home, including super tornadoes, drought, and wildfires.

And who can forget the (former) Governator's affair and secret love child with the housekeeper. Lastly, the Earth's human population reached 7 billion.

What a year! What will 2012 bring?

Happy New Year!

Monday, December 19, 2011

Everybody's going off the deep end, everybody needs a second chance

For approximately 95% of human history* we lived as nomads, no large societies, just small groups of gathers and scavengers. Recent evidence suggests we did not start hunting with sophisticated tools and strategies until  later than previously thought. It blows my mind that for so long we lived a dramatically different lifestyle than what we play out in modern industrial societies.

Globalization. I just (unknowingly) ordered something from China. My first clue after the transaction was complete was the email I received with Chinese characters before the English text. YeePay, the leading online transaction company in China, had processed my transaction. I hadn't heard anything from the merchant in two weeks and there was not a phone number on the website, just an email address. I was worried that I was scammed.

I thought, "What the hell? How can this be happening? Is this a real site? In China?? How the hell did I end up ordering from a business in China?"

Last Thursday, I had a minor meltdown over it after a conversation with my father who was not sure what to do but said his tech guy looked up the site and it seemed legitimate. I called my mom and talked to her and she said that it would turn out and that the package will probably come. After about an hour of worrying, my mom called and told me that she had a notice from the post office that they have a package from China but no one was home at the time of delivery. Ahhhhhhh! Well what do you know, it all worked out. The product would have come from China if I had ordered it from a US company anyway; I just purchased directly from the country of origin. Oh globalization and technology, what have you done?!

My third semester of my master's degree has come to an end but winter break does not mean release from all school work like it did during my undergrad years. I am taking a vacation to Minnesota for 10 days but I have  to start writing my thesis and analyzing my data! My research does not take a break (until I graduate then wait three months for my PhD program to begin, that is). I wish I could spend a month doing whatever I want (which would probably involve a plethora of movies, books, and naps), but I am becoming a professional scientist now. But Dr. Veech was totally cool with my MN trip, so vacation here I come! Resuming work on thesis till after New Year's Day.

The rat babies are almost all grown up now, 4 months old. They have reached sexual maturity (that happens at 5-6 weeks!! Thanks mama Phoebe for demonstrating this!) but they will reach "social maturity" around 6 months of age. I'm not really sure what that means in rat world, but I read that on a few websites about rats. Io and Phoebe have apparently just reached social maturity; I guess they had Matilda and Marley (until she died in October) to show them how to be rats. And they are teaching Tempie, Fancy, and June.

Zeus and Splinter are huge and determined to find the girls. They live together in a separate cage from the girls . I heard male rats were supposed to be calm. But the boys run around like mad men and try to scale up the sides of the girls' house. Maybe I should move them to a different room? Believe it or not, rats can be neutered. But, I don't think I'm going to go there.

I just realized that I never gave Marley a blog tribute. You were a sweet girl and a good auntie. Watching you carry the babies around was so sweet and I feel lucky to have shared nearly two years of my life with you. I hope you had the best life possible.

Monday, December 12, 2011

In the lane, snow is glistening

Another year is coming to a close. I still cannot believe that it is December. Time (feels like) it moves differently here. There is no snow. No sub-zero temperatures. Is it really the holiday season? I am going to Minnesota again  on December 23 for a white Christmas. Last year, I experienced the holidays away, lonely and longing for the place my heart lies. Suddenly "White Christmas" held a whole new meaning. Last winter was brutal. Not due to weather since I live in Texas but painful because I was here while the rest of my family and friends began their normal celebrations. My favorite Christmas carol of all time became something new, something relevant to me. It played over and over in my mind and through the tears and sadness, I hoped that next year would bring me back to MN, that a line in the song will come true.

"In a year, we all will be together."

And now, it's almost here. A good friend of mine told me this morning that she is very happy at the progress that I have made over the last year.

Have yourself a merry little Christmas, let your hear be light.
From now on, our troubles will be out of sight
Have yourself a merry little Christmas
Make the yuletide gay
From now on, our troubles will be miles away

Through the years, we all will be together
If the fates allow
Hang a shining star on the highest bough
And have yourself a merry little Christmas now

Take it away Judy Garland.

Monday, November 21, 2011

I think this compass is broken

Thanksgiving is upon us again. I am making a turkey for the first time.

I am thankful for all the things that I have and for how lucky I have been.

It's pointing east, east, east, east...

Tell me am I getting in too deep?
Every night I'm talking in my sleep
Lately I am so confused, I really don't know what to do

Some time has passed, but I'm not any closer to an answer.

Alexandra told me that I won't have a shortage. It's probably true. Will I ever figure this out?