Alex’s Defense! (EDIT: Now Dr. Alex)

One of the worst things a grad student can hear is “so, when are you graduating?” Even the best of grad students (whatever that means), with a set and followed timeline, will know it’s not just finishing some classes and leaving. The final thing you must do when completing a research-based degree is defend your thesis/dissertation. That oh-so-simple question calls to mind the journey one is about to embark on in order to finally be set free. Years of work, cumulated in a huge written document, then presented publicly, and then scrutinized by your committee. Despite not having my PhD defense for a few more years still, I got a good taste of it when defending my Master’s thesis back in November. Let me tell you, that was a LOT. Now, after years of grueling lab work and months of being cooped up furiously writing, my lovely partner Alex has defended his PhD dissertation. Obviously, I need to celebrate him.



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It’s About Spelunking Time!

I’ll admit it, I was quite upset that I couldn’t attend Ice Fest this year due to my move to Virginia (read: spent way too much time sulking about it). To add to the sting of being in a new university with new people in a new middle of nowhere, I now couldn’t feasibly attend what I hoped had become an annual thing. And not just any annual thing– an annual thing that gives me an absurdly huge boost of self-confidence and lets me escape from the stress of being a grad student. I ended up contacting folk from the group I’ve gone with before about missing this year, so hopefully next year I can coordinate with them to go again. But in the meantime, no extreme, adrenaline-pumping sport for me… or so I thought!

In a funny turn of events, I saw a poster hanging for an outdoor rec group associated with Virginia Tech. It listed their events for the semester, things like a spring break backpacking trip and paddle boarding dates. It also had listed a few dates with caving outings. I decided to look into it and register for one of them. I mean, why not? I love going on cave tours (Carlsbad Caverns, St. Michael’s Cave, Mammoth Cave, Cumberland Caverns, etc.), but always thought caving was too dangerous to try. Seeing that it was guided, all supplies provided, and beginner-friendly, I figured at worst it’d be dorky and I’d just get to walk around a local cave for the day. I was pleasantly surprised to find it was a lot more involved!



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Recording Joy – September 2023

After recent car, financial, and big life decision issues, I’ve been struggling with extremely heightened anxiety. I notice that even little things I’m normally fine with have been putting me on edge lately. I’ve decided to combat this by bringin’ back a practice that kept me sane during the early days of the pandemic: journaling.

Recently, I’ve learned about myself that I do better by speaking or writing my feelings to figure them out. I’ll wonder why something has upset me or made me uneasy, only to have that little alone-in-the-car, self argument enlighten me. But rather than dwell on the negative, I think making a concerted effort to focus on the positive may be beneficial.



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Conditions Matter!

For practically the whole spring semester and up until recently, a few of my fungal strains have been acting up. It is quite distressing when an experiment you’ve done 10’s to 100’s of times suddenly stops working and you don’t know why. You’ve done everything the same as before, so what gives?! Fungi, being the funky little beings they are, sometimes do odd things if their spores have been in the fridge too long, passaged too many times, or even get a random mutation. We have stocks in out -80C freezer for this very purpose– to start from scratch, so to speak. I don’t vibe with non-fungal organisms, but I think similar things can happen to animal cell lines. I want to say some can lose specially-designed phenotypes, stop dividing, and become genetically unstable.



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Getting back to healthy

Before I begin, I want to put a little disclaimer on this post: This is me, this is something I have struggled with, and something I wanted to make changes in. Our weight and size have no bearing on beauty and who we are as people, there are inherent privileges society places on thin women, and health is not a one-size-fits-all. I decided to make changes for myself for reasons I will get into below, but I do not advocate others look at this post in any other way than “this person did a thing and felt like sharing it.”



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Chaotically Productive & Undulating Above the Curve

Last night, while procrastinating on studying for my upcoming immunology exam, I looked back at old planners I saved. Within them are a plethora of doodles, memories of events passed, and stresses over classes I’ve aced and haven’t thought about in years. But, what was interesting was how even as a high school student, a literal child, I still wrote down “completely unrealistic” goals for my day, at least for me. The desire for high productivity and consistency in practicing multiple skill-sets weighed on my mind (and still does, unfortunately). One of my desired summer day-plans looked something like: 5:20am wake up and stretch, 5:30am go for a run, 6:00am shower and get ready, 6:30am breakfast (only 200 calories max), 7:00am practice Spanish or Polish, 7:50am leave for pharmacy shift… followed by a full day of non-stop activity, you get the idea, I will stop it there. Did I achieve days how I planned them? Probably for no more than a couple weeks at absolute most. Now as a grad student, I laugh at the thought of actually carrying out a morning like that, but it doesn’t stop me from wishing I could.



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Shades of Polymathy

“Jack of all trades, master of none”— a colloquial phrase for someone with a variety of skills but none at a level of mastery. I even used it as my topic for my undergrad university entrance essay, talking about how I had a lot of skills that led me to my choice of major and how potential acceptance would allow me to eventually “master” one skill. In recent years, though, the “complete” saying made its way ’round the world wide web, “jack of all trades, master of none, but oftentimes better than master of one,” although from what I could find, the last part is actually a 21st century addition and is not originally part of the phrase. While a bit cheesy to see on Etsy prints, I really find value in the addition. It shows that there is inherent worth in having a wide skill or knowledge base over only knowing a sole topic. Personally, I think masters of one still have value and can help push fields into new frontiers, but, well, so can jacks of all trades, no? Why can’t you be a master of two? Or maybe a master of an interdisciplinary field? Or someone who masters things consecutively in fields with the same base skills? Or maybe you’re just really good at mastering things?



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Boston & Bear Brook Adventures Part 2

With my headache gone and my body somewhat more hydrated, it is again time to continue my epic tale of cozy East Coast travels. Last time, in the part one here, I ended on our museum day. Now, I pick back up as we headed to New Hampshire to spend a couple days snug in a cabin. We made a stop in Concord, where we got treats at a bakery (The Crust and Crumb Baking Co.) and migrated over to a coffee shop (Revelstoke) with a clear view of the golden-domed capital building across the street. I tried a blood orange pistachio latte, a daring choice that paid off, and Alex had one with maple cinnamon flavoring. Mine had a very nutty flavour with notes of citrus brightening the sip as you swallow, really a good combo despite how odd it may seem all together with coffee and oat milk. The rain and fog chilled the morning and made the warm, fragrant cafe an intoxicatingly serene setting for a nice moment together, not to mention they played Glass Animals and similar swirly, melt-in-your-seat music.

Coffee and treats at Revelstoke


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Battery Low

Hi y’all. I don’t know if anyone reads these, but either way I felt like it’s been a while, and whether it’s for me or for you, I want to just give a little update. I’m totally fine, but I realize I just might not have much to post or talk about on here until I get some time to either go on some adventures or to look into personal interests. I felt like just talking about the stress a bit might help, as well if anyone is in grad school or planning to, to know that it’s not just new scientific breakthroughs and super fun times 24/7, even if sometimes posts online make it seem that way. I also apologize if this post comes off like a rant– I guess it sort of is?



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How to Approach Duolingo

[EDIT] As Duolingo has dramatically changed in the last so many months, some of this post no longer applies. I am leaving it up, though, for inspiration and ideas.

For some time now, I’ve advocated for a more holistic approach at language learning, one where you learn from a variety of sources in a variety of ways. This typically includes having a language book or class to teach grammatical concepts or provide explanations, while also incorporating reading/writing/listening/speaking through things like reading local news websites or watching TV in the target language, for example. These approaches typically work best since you avoid the “textbook language” dilemma (where anything outside of the standard language you learned in class is unintelligible to you, or you speak in a very robotic/scrapbook way using bits and pieces rather than “chunking”) and potential illiteracy (where you can speak and get your point across– a form of fluency!– but do not use proper grammar or are unable to read/write). We will all come across these moments in our language journey, especially if this is your first time learning a language or if you are learning one with practically no mutual intelligibility, but the goal is to minimize this before mistakes crystallize or, simply put, we waste our precious time.



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One Semester Done, A Lot More to Go

Today is the last day of the semester, and as of 1am, all my grading and exams and work (except the flood of emails from students arguing grades) is complete. To think, I finished my first semester of grad school in one piece! But in reality, it is mind blowing to realize I am at a point in my life I’ve wanted for so long. High school-me and undergrad-me couldn’t wait to be in this mark on the timeline of my life, and despite the stress and worry it, and honestly everything else, brings me, it really is as freeing and wonderful as I imagined. For a while I’ve wondered “what if I can’t do it?” and “where do I go next?” in regards to jobs, school, and life. Although the pay is low, the hours are long, and each day gives me something new to have imposter syndrome about, I can focus on one thing for now and see where it takes me. It is almost as if I finally feel as though I am not in a transition period of my life. Things feel real again, I am finding ways to feasibly have adventures, and I am working on myself in ways that I really should’ve done before, all of it bit by bit.



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First 5k – Color Run St. Louis

For quite some time now, running a 5k has been on my bucket list. The first time I actually planned to do it was right before the pandemic hit– I had been training a bit early 2020 and was looking into races in the soon coming spring. When we did get quarantined, I assumed things would be back to normal by summer, so kept practicing on the treadmill in my basement. That summer I got COVID and it messed up my body a bit, so I gave running a rest, and picked it up again the next spring. Summer came again and I was off to Honduras, so I embraced the delicious foods and lack of safe running trails until I got back. I signed up in February and did a little bit of C25K (Couch to 5k, a free and legit plan to get you in shape for completing a full race) again, slowly bringing myself from someone who runs an occasional mile at the gym to making it a bit more of a routine. As luck would have it I got sick multiple times in those months, so my training was not the best, but I still went at it when I could.



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Ice Climbing Adventures!

Usually one would assume a spring break is the time for heading somewhere warm, getting a taste of the salt, sand, and sun before heading back to the last and arguably hardest part of our semester. For me, that thought was completely disregarded, because I went ICE CLIMBING this weekend?!? Oh, am I not giving you the expected pretty little build up description or something? Nope. I feel a sport as funky as this, plus the fact that your one and only resident nerd went and crushed it, deserves a little S.S.P. (shameless self-promotion).



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I Still Print My Photos Part 1

Photography is consumed at a considerably larger scale than ever before thanks to the Internet, yet the appreciation for the art of it is not proportional to these changes. It’s quite vexing that photography once was an esteemed, genuine art form in the public’s eye yet now is something we expect to see every time we open up our phones. But, if we see low quality, poorly composed photos, we mock it. On the other hand, photos that are museum-worthy are overlooked for someone’s travel photos laden with cutesy filters. Our eyes are trained to expect a specific type of photo and many of us expect nothing different. It has become something artistically undervalued and socially commonplace.



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Returning “Home” Poco a Poco

As the saying goes, all good things must come to an end, and for me, this chapter of my life spent in Honduras has concluded, a brief intermission in Chicago has begun, and soon, a new chapter in Carbondale will follow. I do have my hopes there will be a “Honduras– Revisited!” at some point, but that hope I will tuck into my heart and allow myself to find again one day, a surprise for when I go to put it in the wash and check the pockets. I was only in Honduras for a little less than half a year, but it feels like much longer. I am grateful to have met so many incredible people, all of which have made an impact on me in various ways. I have been shown more kindness than I deserve and that I could never pay back in full. Honduras quickly became my second home, not necessarily only in the physical sense, but by the people who immediately befriended me, who stayed patient all the times I got tongue-tied in Spanish, who laughed at my (supposedly) Russian-sounding r’s, who taught me how to cook, who showed me the best hiking trails, who made it their goal to have me try the “essential” Honduran foods (cough cough all of them), who shared their music and eagerly received mine back, spent their evenings with me, and made me feel more welcome in a foreign place than I usually feel at home.



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Cada Tarde, Saludo a la Mujer que Hace Pupusas

Mi única experiencia en un otro país, excepto de Honduras, es en España (y Gibraltar, pero no hay un sello en mi pasaporte…). Pase una semana allí, y en este tiempo aprendí un poco sobre la cultura y el idioma. El problema es que mi experiencia es solo la comprensión del nivel de superficie. Pues, entiendo un poco más porque estaba disfrutando de la televisión y libros y música desde allí por muchos años antes de mi viaje, pero no tengo y no puedo tener una comprensión profunda. Antes de vivir en Honduras, pensé de verdad que tenía un conocimiento sobre España, pero ahora entiendo que solo era una turista.



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Blogs I Like

As someone who writes their thoughts and rambles on the internet, it makes sense that I would enjoy the thoughts and rambles of others who do the same. I personally do it for a variety of reasons: using it as a personal journal (admittedly, it’s very cathartic), documenting my experiences (for others and so I don’t forget details), sharing something I find interesting (because if my friends and family hear me geek out one more time they’ll probably lose it), and to stay active and creative in my writing (nowadays my writings are large, scientific projects, and I sorely miss English-class-type writing). It has become a no-pressure hobby of mine, something I add to when I have time or need an outlet, and I’ve managed to keep it up for some time. I mean, I switched over to this domain in January 2021 but I had been using my Weebly site for at least a few years prior, on and off.



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Sometimes things happen quickly…

Monday night I was put in contact with a school who was looking for a teacher to fill a last minute vacancy. Tuesday morning I scheduled an interview, and by afternoon I was given the job and told the school I was volunteering at immediately that I would be leaving. Wednesday morning I took a bus with one of the other teachers from the volunteer school and arrived in Santa Rosa de Copán. Thursday I settled in, and Friday I began teacher prep. Sometimes things happen quickly. My decision to leave Garden School Victoria was by no means an easy one, but as I reflect on it after, it was definitely the right one, and hopefully will continue to be the right one.



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Bubble Wrap

It’s been about three weeks since I left Chicago. In reality, it’s not that long of a time– some people even go on vacation for three weeks– but it has felt significantly longer. When I first got here, it was like entering a new world; I was an alien trying to figure out how to be. Culture shock is real. I remember doubting that I’d ever feel it when we talked about it a year ago in my TEFL course, but sure enough, it happens to the best of us. It feels isolating. It feels like an anxious knot in your stomach. You question why you’re here and what you’re doing. I looked at plane tickets online and thought about returning home. I know the feelings of culture shock aren’t over yet, and I’ll probably go through this again, but at the current moment I am doing a lot better. Having started teaching has given me more of a schedule, and I’m using this change to form new habits, hopefully with time for productivity and relaxation. All in all, I’d say it is helping me handle the differences and build a temporary little life here. So yay! Assimilation and positive changes! But we’ll get back to that later.



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Wandering in Copán

Shortly after arriving in Honduras, I was informed that the next week was a school holiday. All the other teachers would not be returning until the 10th of July, so I was essentially free to either stay alone in the volunteer house or take the time to travel. On a whim (and fighting an overwhelming urge to be stay home and “be productive,” whatever that is supposed to mean when you’ve hardly settled into life in a new country), I booked a bus ticket with Hedman Alas to a place on the west side of Honduras called Copán Ruinas. Other volunteers had done the trip prior, and they were able to give me very clear instructions on how to finagle it myself.



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Adios Chicago, Hola Honduras!

There is no other way to begin this other than “greetings from Honduras!” And wow, does it feel strange to say that! Although I’m definitely getting used to the changes, I know that mentally accepting the fact that I’m here will take some time.

I left Chicago Tuesday morning, and after some issues with Spirit I was moved to a later flight. My time in the airport was relatively uneventful. I had a long layover at LAX and decided it was better to just camp out there than risk trying to explore. The time, tiredness, and loneliness did get to me, though, and I had a fun little cry about 20-something hours into my airport adventures. I kinda realized that some important people in my life would be in a different place when I return to Illinois and that I had some feelings I didn’t really know that I had. Nevertheless, post-tears and overpriced airport snacks, I made it to Honduras around 7am Wednesday.



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Big Steps

Hey y’all, long time no write. So, some news: this Friday I officially graduated with honors with a Bachelor of Science in Biology with a minor in Chemistry from the University of Illinois at Chicago (can’t believe I’m officially a biologist!!!). With much effort, gusto, and possibly a lack of sanity, I managed to do this in three years, and I’m quite proud of myself. I also completed my Honors Capstone Thesis (Vector-Borne Disease and Climate Change) and won the Honors College Award of Distinction from my presentation at the UIC 2021 Impact and Research Week.

Obligatory graduation photo! Chicago, IL


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Van Gogh to Soothe the Soul

Oh did I have just the loveliest day Saturday! Although my inorgo lab (and procrastination) led me to getting under 4 hours of sleep, I woke puffy-faced and ready to get going. I headed into work for a short shift, grabbed some coffee, then headed home to be picked up by my friends and their family. We then drove downtown to the Immersive Van Gogh Exhibit Chicago. Let me tell you, I am a geek for artists, specifically their life stories and how it influenced their art, so I was over the moon. Not to mention, pop-up galleries always have a certain flair to them since they’re meant for more than just art enthusiasts. I guess what I’m saying is that they make it a lot easier for the average person to get into the art, which may sound lazy, but art takes many forms and this is one– a dramatic and oftentimes intoxicating one.



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Love in the Time of Coronavirus

Lonely and bored, bored and lonely– the ongoing theme of quarantine. Even if you have a thousand tasks to complete and a house full of family, the feeling still persists. Well, maybe not for everyone, but arguably many. Prior to quarantine, I was content with my daily positive social interactions from classmates, professors, and friends. None were drawn out or particularly close-knit situations, but it was these small doses of connection that kept me motivated and grounded. I took pleasure in exploring the city alone and sharing my discoveries with a classmate over a quick cup of tea before a shared class, or talking about something I read with an engaging professor during office hours. Now, alone more than ever, I know that “introvert” is not synonymous with “recluse.” With so much time and too many alone thoughts, I asked myself, what is love (baby don’t hurt me, don’t hurt me, no moreeeee!)? I could not answer this. So, why not figure out what the opposite of love is and work from there? Some say hate. But no, that is the absence of love. A hole. An emptiness. Even the most active of hatreds caves, and if it is fiery then it is not exclusively hate. Instead, it is grief, it is longing. It is full of strong emotion that rivals that of love; it is the love for which is craved. The love one can’t have, either from the start or to the finish. It is the yearning as your touch your lips, their face in your mind’s eye. The shaky breath when a path is a dead end.



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Pharmacy Life During COVID-19 Vaccinations

Setting up for a vaccine clinic in Addison, IL

I’ve wanted to make this post like this for a while now, but I’ve held out in hopes that things would miraculously get better and I could type it out while laughing, glass of lemonade in hand, at how ridiculous the recent past has been. Sadly, these hopes were to no avail. Instead, I am gracing your Internet presence with a disgruntled rant about what it’s like to be a retail pharmacy technician during the COVID-19 pandemic. More specifically, what it’s been like now that the vaccine is available. Apologies in advance, so let’s begin, shall we?



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The *Feeling* of Getting Stuff Done

Productivity 
*orgasms*

I’d say there is nothing I like more than being lazy and relaxing, but really, I can easily say I prefer having a wildly productive day and then having a spot scheduled to be lazy and relax without imposing on my goals/progress/time for important things. For years I have been obsessed with planning everything to a tee, setting super unrealistic goals, and telling myself to be a mini superwoman without finding a healthy way to actually go about it. As I get older, I seem to be getting better with managing my time, namely with how I balance the most important things, like school and health. Yet, as finals or some other busy time roll around, I still trash those and re-engage in unhealthy habits. 



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Java and Minimalism

My question of the day:
How much coding ability qualifies as knowing how to code?
I was reading through some posts on what MD/PhD programs look for, and a lot of people suggested learning to code. I would not be doing that to look good for admissions, though, I’m not about that life, but rather because if it saves me the trouble later when I would actually need to use that skill, it would be worth it. I feel like there are a lot of different languages to program in, so how would you know for sure which will be needed? What I learned in AP Computer Science in high school gave me a pretty good introduction, but I don’t feel like I completely mastered Java or anything. It has, though, helped me mess with the html in Weebly and helped me find errors in the program my PI wrote when I did research in a cochlear implant lab. That program, though, was in Matlab, which looked similar to Java but most definitely was not the same. Since I will most likely do my later studies in STEM or linguistics (or both???), I looked up common languages.



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