Half engineer, Half neuroscientist

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18

Sep

2009 Philadelphia Arthritis Walk - Give me a hand!

Posted by melitami  Published in chronic illness, philadelphia

Two of the chronic conditions I have are viral arthritis and fibromyalgia, both of which are arthritic conditions. The Arthritis Foundation has walks every year to raise money for awareness and research for cures for the over 100 arthritis diseases that affect 1 in 5 Americans. Please help me out and donate towards my walking in the 2009 Philadelphia Arthritis walk on May 17, 2009. You can find my donation page here.

I live with the pain and the meds from these conditions everyday. My mom also has fibromyalgia and rheumatoid arthritis. My grandparents all have osteoarthritis. Please help me raise money so maybe we can someday find better treatments and hopefully even cures for these painful disease.

Thanks!

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26

Aug

Summer changes into fall…

Posted by melitami  Published in GGG, chronic illness, school

This coming weekend is Labor Day. Kids are heading back to school, college students are starting semesters back up again, it’s starting to get a little cooler, leaves are slowly changing colors. It’s been a very different summer for me, so I feel like a bit of a review and some reflection are needed.

I’m used to not having summers off. I went to Drexel for 5 years, had Fall-Winter co-op, and classes Spring-Summer. So 6 months out of the year I was working full-time and taking a class or two; the other six months I was taking classes full-time and working a part-time job or two. The summer between undergraduate and graduate school I worked as a science teacher and substitute teacher at a day camp in a Philadelphia charter school. Last summer, I worked in my thesis lab; I wrote at least two end-of-year reports for NASA and helped write a year 2 grant proposal on top of working phase shift and overnight shifts for various experiments.

This summer’s been different. I failed my prelim (qualifying exam, whatever you want to call it) at the end of June/beginning of July. The head of my examining committee told me to take the summer off to study, since I had 3 months to retake the exam. I’ve been in lab a few days this summer, but most of my summer has been spent at home in my apartment with my kitties. For me, that’s been a big change. The first week or so was great, because I could sleep and get caught up on some things, but then it got tedious. So I’ve filled in the days with entering the world of Web 2.0, which I love, and reading books, something I haven’t had a chance to do in a long time.

I’m now loving blogging, podcasting, using the Twitter, and attending Tweetups. I’m attending Philly Podcamp September 5-6. Recording Girls Gone Geek is one of the highlights of my week. I’ve been a guest blogger on LiveCrunch.com. I’ve met some incredibly awesome people through Twitter and the Tweetups I’ve been to in NYC, and plan to meet some awesome Philly people at the Tweetup tomorrow night.

Going into this summer, and for the past few years, I thought I had my career plan all worked out. Get my PhD, do a post doc or two, become an associate professor, get tenure track somewhere, and just teach and run a lab. Now I’m not as sure I want to stay in academia. The politics involved (which I did know about previous to this summer) are just seeming to be more than I want to deal with. If Kevin and I ever want to have kids, a tenure track faculty position is not very conducive to that. If I need to take time off because of my health, tenure track faculty positions aren’t very conducive to that either (for those of you unaware of my litany of health problems, I’ll blog about them at some point, I’m getting a little better about not hiding them). Then there is the fact that I’m loving social media, and having a blast at it. Frankly, I enjoy it a lot more than the crap I deal with in grad school at the moment.

No worries, I will retake my prelim. I’m scheduled to get my written questions September 10 and take my oral exam on September 24. I’m much better prepared this time, so I hope/think I will pass. I’ll take a few years to get my PhD, especially since human research takes time (I study the effect of light on body clock rhythms in humans). I’m just not so sure I’m going to stay in academia once I’m done. The interview we did with Dr. Kirsten Sanford on GGG a few weeks ago definitely gave me food for thought.

For now, I’ve got a few more weeks of studying to do, and a bunch of meetings to attend to set up stuff for the new semester coming up. I’m going to keep podcasting and blogging and tweeting, no worries there. I just have to see where the balance strikes itself.

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12

Aug

Repost - Happy 5th Anniversary, BYDLS! Spoons!

Posted by melitami  Published in BYDLS, chronic illness

Photobucket

A website I love, and am a moderator on is But You Don’t Look Sick. This wonderful website and forums is for people with chronic illnesses and their caregivers/family members, offering a wonderful, caring community of people who understand the frustrations of having a chronic illness (or multiple) and dealing with doctors and people who don’t think you look sick or think you’re too young to be sick, etc. Sunday, July 27 is the 5th anniversary of the site, and I took this photo in honor of it! One of the major cornerstones of BYDLS is The Spoon Theory, written by the site’s founder Christine Miserandino (now Donato) to help explain to other people how chronic illnesses like lupus, fibromyalgia, etc. affect a person and what they can and can’t do. So spoons are a big topic of conversation over there.

I have multiple chronic illnesses, and have had my fair share of adventures with doctors to get diagnoses, as well as having people tell me I don’t look sick or I’m too young to be that sick. I’m better than I was a few years ago; I have a wonderful doctor who has helped me treatment-wise tremendously and a wonderful boyfriend who cares for and supports me in any way he can. However, that’s no substitute for the fantastic men and women at BYDLS, who are some of the most caring, kind, understanding people I have ever had the pleasure of interacting with.

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23

Jul

Ironic or just sad?

Posted by melitami  Published in chronic illness, randomness

Is it ironic or just pitiful that I love watching cooking/foodie shows like Iron Chef America and No Reservations, even though there is no chance I can eat anything on these shows EVER?

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22

Jul

Happy 5th Anniversary, BYDLS!

Posted by melitami  Published in BYDLS, chronic illness

Photobucket

A website I love, and am a moderator on is But You Don’t Look Sick. This wonderful website and forums is for people with chronic illnesses and their caregivers/family members, offering a wonderful, caring community of people who understand the frustrations of having a chronic illness (or multiple) and dealing with doctors and people who don’t think you look sick or think you’re too young to be sick, etc. Sunday, July 27 is the 5th anniversary of the site, and I took this photo in honor of it! One of the major cornerstones of BYDLS is The Spoon Theory, written by the site’s founder Christine Miserandino (now Donato) to help explain to other people how chronic illnesses like lupus, fibromyalgia, etc. affect a person and what they can and can’t do. So spoons are a big topic of conversation over there.

I have multiple chronic illnesses, and have had my fair share of adventures with doctors to get diagnoses, as well as having people tell me I don’t look sick or I’m too young to be that sick. I’m better than I was a few years ago; I have a wonderful doctor who has helped me treatment-wise tremendously and a wonderful boyfriend who cares for and supports me in any way he can. However, that’s no substitute for the fantastic men and women at BYDLS, who are some of the most caring, kind, understanding people I have ever had the pleasure of interacting with.

no comment

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2009 arthritis walk akoha arthritis arthritis foundation BYDLS chronic illness dean kamen fundraising just one more book link mugging philadelphia philly photography podcamp philadelphia podcasting prelim robotics rosenbach museum school technology update

Recent Entries

  • Update on the state of me
  • Not quite the day I was expecting…
  • Life outside academia and social media
  • 2009 Philadelphia Arthritis Walk - Give me a hand!
  • Guest podcast appearance!
  • One of my heroes, Dean Kamen
  • Countdown to retaking the biggest exam of my life
  • Summer changes into fall…
  • Aperture Nature Workshops Contest and Point and Shoot Photrade Contest
  • Repost - Happy 5th Anniversary, BYDLS! Spoons!

Recent Comments

  • nwjerseyliz in Countdown to retaking the biggest exam of my life
  • nwjerseyliz in Working from home - tips needed!
  • Random Selection of Posts

    • Repost - Happy 5th Anniversary, BYDLS! Spoons!
    • Pre-Prelim madness!
    • 2009 Philadelphia Arthritis Walk - Give me a hand!
    • Wii Fit finally!
    • Evernote t-shirt!
    • Web Baby Shower
    • Epic Fail
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