Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Haiti

this is the kind of event, for which scale becomes meaningless, numbers become fatuous, suffering becomes unquantifiable, and where one is in complete awe of the ungraciousness, brevity, and capriciousness of life.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

2010

Because I am craving the cathartic feeling lists give me, here's 2009 in review...

Joined a gym, worked with a personal trainer for 8 weeks, finally shed freshman 10.
Played kings for the first time.
Best Valentine's day ever
Weird "relationship".... eww.
Abstract on implementation of decision aids presented in Boston
Read lots of Nabokov, Chekhov
Family vacay to Hearst Castle, San Luis Obispo, San Francisco, memories of the endless drive on California One, the "whale" we stared at for 30 minutes before realizing it was a rock, Yosemite
Re-wrote personal statement 3 times
MOVED
Applied to medical school
Maine <3
Reunited with the love of my life
Family reunion
Duke visit
Hosted not one, not two, but three fantastic parties at the BOMB
Got bangs
3 trips to Charlottesville, VA
Health literacy abstract presented in Hollywood
Discovered awesome and cheap manicure place near work
Discovered awesome and cheap yoga classes
Sunday potlucks
Seeing Built to Spill twice
Career crises: rural medicine, primary care, research in health disparities, Masters in bioethics, neuroscience and decision making, PhD in decision sciences???
Thanksgiving in Maine and meeting Gus
Deciding the gender and names of my 3 future kids
Seeing old friends on new year's eve

And things I am looking forward to in 2010...

Birthday!
DC trip in April with Laura
Mayyyybe finally finishing that paper and getting published?
Perfecting my crepe-making skills
Life after MGH
THERESA JACQUIE CHINA SUMMER 2010

Monday, August 24, 2009

Knowledge, my soulmate.

Chatting with a friend today made me realize, one year post-college, working the 9 to 5, going to the gym two to three times a week, “sleeping in” until 8 on weekends, meeting up for a drink after work, going on dates with guys I don’t want to sleep with and sleeping with guys I don’t want to date, that I am finally jaded.

Don’t get me wrong, I like my job and love my friends, but like today I spent the whole day pasting formulas into Excel and formatting a survey. During lunch I balanced my checkbook. I am not devaluing the utility of Microsoft Office or balancing one’s budget, but it’s days like these when I really miss college.

Ultimately, college brought out the best in me. There were some rough patches, but college made me want to prove to myself that I was cut out to make a difference. That, as I observed the machinery of the world through protective lenses, someday I too would help make its wheels turn, and that other people would be there to help me grease the gears. Learning became something that I viewed not only as practical and useful, but nourishing, replenishing, and empowering. And I really miss learning for learning’s sake.

I realized that I have not had any remotely satisfying conversations with people in the real world. For the past year I have had so few intellectual debates, nerdy gush sessions, or vaguely scholarly discussions it’s a little discouraging. I miss the days of sitting under the gazebo with a tub of Ben and Jerry’s and pondering the moral implications of artificial intelligence, or walking into my sorority’s living room and hearing people exchange thoughts about gender roles and stereotypes, or going to a talk on a Tuesday afternoon about the clashing of traditional Islamic culture with modern civilization experienced by youth in Muslim countries. I remember attending my friends’ thesis presentations and just being amazed and inspired by how erudite they were. People seemed to be interested in so many things and open to so many ideas; college seemed like a place where, whatever crazy interest you had, there was always someone who you could bounce it off of.

I am thirsty for knowledge, and I can’t wait to learn, learn, learn. I want to experience the rush I get when studying the elegance of homeostasis in the cardiovascular system, I want to be brought close to tears by the final scene of Isben’s “A Dollhouse”, I want to revel in the absurdity of Dada poetry, read about the existential philosophies of Camus and Sartre, be haunted for weeks by Wagner’s operas, delve into the glutamine theory of schizophrenia, examine health disparities related to demographics, know why the universe is expanding, and learn to differentiate a cabernet sauvignon from a syrah by taste.

I guess this is good news since I AM practically selling my soul to debt just so I can go back to school for another 4 years followed by god knows how many more years of training. No surprise that I picked one of the careers with the highest time investment in educating oneself. Point is, knowledge is my drug; I live to learn.

Monday, June 22, 2009

Love/hate the internet.

I opened Firefox, investigated USC Keck School's website for 2 seconds, then googled "red line DC", followed by "jon and kate announcement", and finally "chris brown rihanna".

UGHHHHHH

internet 1
me 0

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Can't think of a good title, but we can try "The New Place Fucking Rocks"

Thoroughly enjoyed my first weekend at the BOMB aptly located in BRIGHTon, Mass. We had our first guest over on Friday night, and made deliciously rich macadamia nut-encrusted mahi-mahi and steamed broccoli and had little dessert cookies from Trader Joe's. I made the most perfect eggs this morning; glossy, runny yolks firmly ensconced in an amoeba-shaped bed of soft, light whites. With a dash of sea salt and ground pepper. Served on wheat toast with butter.

Spent a large portion of the weekend at the office rewriting my personal statement, which actually consists of 90% contemplating, 9% wordsmithing, and 1% writing. I sent the old one to someone on Thursday, who happened to be online by chance, and lo-and-behold her advice was so absolutely right-on that I decided to scratch the whole thing and start over. There was something about the old one that just didn't seem right to me, and now that I have a new frame everything makes so much more sense. I saw reasons and consequences behind my actions in the past few years that I had not noticed before. I always thought my decision to go to medical school was just something I stumbled upon, a default career path by process of elimination. In some ways, it still is. There will always be this partly intuitive aspect to it, like I knew this is what I would do just as you know when you feel a connection to someone or something. And the problem was that I was trying to explain the why, and that was like writing an essay on why we love; we can't explain it, we just do. Now I have shifted to explain the how and what, and I'm noticing themes that thread together my experiences, academics, internships in a way that is almost freakishly tidy. Things make sense, what can I say.

I spent a grand total of $19 this weekend. $8 at Goodwill on some trinkets and a $4 stainless steel pot, and $11 on art supplies for custom art for the apartment. Irene is working with finger paint, sponge rollers, and gessoed canvas, and I am working with foam board + markers. So far I have a pencil sketch of a grotesquely proportionally distorted aerial view of downtown Boston. Drawing reminds me of the good old days in high school when I would be up late at night with only my thoughts, my art, and the New Pornographers. After I finish this project I will start on making a drawing for the game "pin the tail on the exotic animal" for our upcoming jungle-themed housewarming party.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Two weeks.

2009 will soon be classified into two time frames, pre-June 1st and post-June 1st. Here's what's happening leading up to that monumental date:

May 20th - final exam in Biology of Cancer
May 23rd-30th - Redlands, San Fran
JUNE 1ST - I will finally become a real person who acknowledges her need for such things as natural light, and all the perks that come with it, including photosynthesis, vitamin D, warmth, a sense of the time indoors, and anti-vampire powers, as I will be moving out of the Dumpsta into a lovely SUNSHINE FILLED apartment in Cleveland Circle! Hallelujah!

In short, these are epic times ahead.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Cello Suite No.1

I took the T from Harvard station this morning. This rastafarian dude sat in the corner adjusting his cello bow while hordes of working people in their casual Friday clothes waited for the train. As I stared at the tracks, he began to play the first Bach Cello Suite. I can't describe how sweet the sound was. He might have looked disheveled and homeless, but my God did he know music. It was like, this hollow, negative space being replaced with something so organic and human, it was like he took this beautiful, rich melody, deconstructed it into its metaphysical parts of tone, articulation, rhythm, and created an abstract tapestry of space and time and sound that was larger than the sum of its parts, that was more than whole; it was nothing short of magical.