Thursday, May 21, 2009

Yum

A while back, I commented at Sciencegirl's place that we wanted to learn to cook Indian food. EGM has become obsessed really into it, and we have been practicing curries and such for the past several weeks. This chicken korma is currently simmering on our stove. It smells awesome. Too bad it's nearly 11 pm...

UPDATE: We had a taste and it was incredible! Holy crap!

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

NYR Update

First, let me just say that EGM got poison ivy and was scratching all night. I'm tired! And if it happens again tonight, one of us is going to the couch. Aren't I nice, sensitive, and empathetic?

Now that that's out of the way, I think I should report on my new years' resolutions. I have performed mediumly on both of them. I've sent birthday cards for almost all of the family birthdays so far, but several of them have gone out late. But, I have the next ones all ready to send. As for being more eco-conscience, there has been progress and setbacks. I kind of gave up on the paper recycling after the pile got so big that EGM finally threw it away -- I just kept putting off dropping it at the recycling place. We also decided not to do the CSA after all because we're not sure we'll actually use that much produce. On the other hand, the garden is going well. The seeds I started indoors are starting to look like plants and the things I planted outside are starting to take. Also, we started a compost pile near the garden. I have been bringing our kitchen scraps to work to compost, which gives me warm fuzzies. I'll post some photos soon.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Infrequent

Today I set a goal, and I achieved it! I planned to read and take notes on six boring methods papers and stay until at least 6 pm. I finished the last paper at 5:50. I was totally exhausted at that point but it was okay because the traffic was great! SAVOR IT.

I have one last "experiment" to do for my thesis research. It's small, but it will make the fourth data chapter. Part of the method is my bread-and-butter lab work that I can knock out in a matter of days. That will be followed, however, by something newish. I am sort of familiar with the kind of thing I want to do, as it's an auxiliary technique for us. But, we've already decided that I will do something a little different with this study. Thus, I have to decide on exactly which approach I want to use out of a suite of related methods. I've been reading all sorts of reviews and comparison papers and the emerging theme seems to be, "all the methods suck". Some comparisons suggest that method X is really good but method Y is useless while others say that method Y is better. Then a review will say they are both terrible, but method Z works great . And another one will say that Y is good in situation A but only mediocre in situation B...you get the point. I think it will come down to a gut feeling that will probably turn into a well reasoned argument after some rumination. I'm pretty sure that I'll be able to support whatever decision I make because there is such variety in the literature -- there is support for almost anything I want to say! But right now, I'm frustrated with trying to sort out what to do and bored with all these dry papers.

I met my goal for today, but there is more of the same waiting for me tomorrow. At least I get to look at my garden at lunch time!

Morning FAIL, already

It's after 8 am and I'm at home, waiting for EGM to get out of the shower. We were up too late last night watching Babel (so tedious!) so I just couldn't deal with a 5:30 alarm. So much for my new, early-morning way of life.

I'll be better tomorrow.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Butt in chair, eyes open

Alice Academic posted an interesting question: How do you stop yourself from ramping up the coffee when you have a deadline? She has increased her coffee intake in recent months, wants to cut back, yet worries that she'll need it to get through her summer writing goals. Personally, I only drink coffee first thing in the morning, at which point it is the most delicious substance I can fathom, whereas later in the day it has the appeal of sewage sludge. But the core problem -- needing a boost to make the writing happen -- is common. When I'm not working in the lab, I do suffer from the antsy pantsies or, conversely, drooping eyelids. Here are some ways that I deal with it:
  • Jumping-jacks. Everyone thinks this sounds really lame, but it works. 5-10 jj's when I'm getting sleepy perks me right up.
  • I take a short walk around my building. Moving around, getting a little fresh air, and most importantly, getting a little sunshine really wakes me up.
  • I almost always go to the far-away bathroom. My legs start to fall asleep if I'm at my desk too long, so it's good to get frequent "exercise snacks".
  • No reading bloglines unless I'm eating, which is how I define an official break. I think keeping focused on a single task rather than flitting among distractions is a good thing, but it's so hard. I haven't decided if this one really helps or just makes me bored.
  • Having my breaks really be breaks, and making myself wait for them until a specific time or I've met a specific goal.
Like Alice, I've got a lot of writing coming up so I'm also looking for strategies to help stay on task. What do you do to keep your ass in your chair and your mind on your work?

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Early starts

Remember how I cut back on carpooling? So I could get more hours in at work? And based on the parameters of my life, how I would consider joining a religion if it included a traffic god?

Well, I started out thinking I would continue to go to work at my normal carpool time, which is 7:00 am, and stay past rush hour instead of leaving before it really heats up like we we do when we carpool. That plan failed. The first few days I tried it, the traffic was uncharacteristically shitty on the way home even when I left work at 7 pm. Blow. After a few days in a row of that, I decided to try a different strategy.

For the past week or more, I've been leaving between 6:10 and 6:40 am and it's going well. I am decidedly a morning person. I'm not a morning person in the sense that I just pop awake and feel great -- waking up to the alarm sucks and I sleep late on weekends -- but I'm more alert, focused, and energetic early in the day. I've found that I can be productive when I'm tired early in the day, but it's all over once I get tired in the evening. So if I get to work by 7 am, I can work >8 hours and still leave before the worst of rush hour starts. Super.

Since I'd rather sleep as late as possible, it takes some effort for me to pull this off. I have to pack my lunch the night before, program the coffee maker, make sure my go-cup is clean, and possibly even lay out my clothes. But if I do all that, it works.

I know lots of you parents and other types of super busy people get up at the crack of dawn every day and it's nothing special. I know I'm not a special snowflake, but I think this is important for me to share because it's a change I've been wanting to make for a while. There are a bunch of things in my life that I think I'd prefer a different way, or things that I feel like I'm putting on hold while I'm in school/living the transient life/underpaid/whatever. This was a relatively easy change to make (but who knows how long I'll keep it up!). Maybe I'll work on some others soon.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

RBOC

So I've been out of the blogging loop lately. I was away for a few days, but I've been back for over a week. I guess I've just been doing other stuff in the evenings. Anyway, to get back in the swing of things, I give you bullets:
  • Today I finally finished manuscript revisions for reviews I got in MARCH. I was so slow with this! I sent them to the advisors; hopefully they will like what I've done so I can resubmit soon.
  • I got rejected for a post doc fellowship that I really, really wanted. Bummer.
  • I've been going to a book club. I really enjoy it, although all the other women are good friends, except me. They are nice, however, and I'm hoping to get some new friends out of it. Last time we discussed The Story of Edgar Sawtelle, which I totally didn't get when I read it. It just seemed filled with strange choices for the plot. Fortunately, the others in the book club are humanities types who informed me that the book was a take on Hamlet. Knowing that, it made a LOT more sense.
  • I had a great time with my friends in Florida last weekend.
  • Since I cut back on the carpooling, EGM and I have been going in super early. Today we left at 6:10 am. Loving it so far, but it takes some organization. There will probably be a full post on this later.
  • I am so ready for the Lost finale tomorrow, although I am not ready for a six-month break in the show. We have leftovers in the fridge, so we can have dinner ready for the early start time.