Monday, June 20, 2016

Epic....

In the last post I talked about the "end of an era"; that is, the end of my PhD program. But we've traveled even further down the rabbit hole. So with that said I will bid you adieu with the last post of Hither and Yon. I've thoroughly enjoyed writing this blog but as you may have noticed the stretches between posts have become longer and longer. But before I go I'd like to share another "last" or "finally" moment.

Week before last Tim and I took our bound theses and deposited them in the library. I realize that might not sound like a big deal but it is. At Victoria "lodgement" (depositing your thesis in the library) signifies the end of the PhD program. And us being the nerds we are wanted to do this together. We gave our "first year talks" (where you go from provisional to full PhD candidate status) on the same day and said we'd race until the end. Now it's 2016 and we have arrived. So we gathered our bound theses and digital copies, had a friend take a few photos and we set off for the library. There you have it, officially official.

And it goes without saying that this Hither and Yon adventure has been truly amazing!!!








Monday, February 22, 2016

Two and three little letters....

In September I submitted my PhD thesis. After hacking away at the writing for months and months on end I put it out of my mind straight away. This was particularly easy because I had started my job at Wellington Zoo the same week.

Then, just two weeks ago, I received my examiner's reports. And things began to get very real, very fast. Upon thesis submission a soft bound copy of the thesis is mailed out to your three appointed examiners: one from Victoria, one from New Zealand (or because NZ is so small it's sometimes Australia) and one international examiner. They have a couple months to read over the thesis, make comments and submit them to Victoria in an official examiner's report. These are then forwarded on to the candidate, in this case me, and his/her supervisor. With two weeks to prepare I scheduled multiple meetings with my primary supervisor as well as meetings with my secondary supervisor and my "technical" supervisor who helped me a great deal when running the molecular analysis portion of the project. Then every waking moment when I wasn't working at the Zoo I was on campus studying, reading and trying not to panic. I was plagued with incredible worry and doubt. Would I be able to contribute to intelligent discussion regarding my project? Everyone seems to be convinced that this is a given. However, the longer I worked on my project the more questions I had. The more unsure I felt.

With great trepidation I woke up the morning of January 28th and there was no place to hide. After nearly four years, innumerable hours in the laboratory,  and many months writing and revising I had arrived at the end. The end of an era. Tim and I walked over to the Faculty of Graduate Research where the examinations are held. I sat outside the room where it would take place with my heart pounding, mind racing. Soon after the door opened and the Chair walked over, introduced himself and accompanied through the door. I was actually in the room! Where hundreds of other students had defended their theses. I'm incredibly happy to report that upon sitting down at the table I began to relax. Just a tiny bit but at that point I would take anything. We discussed the procedure and then they handed things over to me. Candidates prepare a short presentation, mostly for the benefit of the Chair, that sums up his/her research before the interrogation begins. When preparing this ridiculously short talk I was a bit perturbed that I could sum up four years of blood, sweat and tears in just ten minutes!! What?! That seemed unjust to say that least. I continued to relax as I presented and then the questions commenced. We began discussing and, what seemed like, suddenly the Chair raised his hand and said, "Um, we've been going steady for an hour and a half, would anyone like to take a break?". I was dumbfounded. How could an hour and a half have already whipped by? Everyone else was happy to continue and all eyes fell on me. I'm not sure how I appeared to them but it was left up to me to decide. Considering things were going well up till that point I figured, "Why stop now?". In retrospect adrenaline was probably buoying my mind and body. So we continued on with the questions and discussion. Then the most amazing thing happened. The examiner's looked back over their notes and said, "Yeah, I think we're done", which essentially translates to: the candidate has fulfilled his/her part of this process and now we can deliberate. From this point I think I began the descent/crash back to planet Earth. As per the process I was asked to leave the room which I did with what I'm sure was a bewildered smile on my face. I took a few deep breaths and visited the bathroom where I looked at my reflection and wondered if it could be true. Was I possibly done? Really? From there I returned to the waiting area and by that time my supervisor was there waiting for me. He extended congratulations and said that he was very impressed with how well it went. Now you have to understand that my supervisor is a super smart guy and my worst fear was that he would be disappointed with my defense! Just then Tim came up the stairs and sat with us until the committee had finalized their report. Then Bart and I were invited back into the room for the verdict. Before anything else they commended me for an excellent presentation, confident defense and that my PhD comprised interdisciplinary work. They were happy to recommend that I be awarded the Doctorate of Philosophy!! But wait. This was with the caveat that I make some minor revisions, mostly clarification, and submit the final version to the Faculty of Graduate Research. As you can imagine I floated out of there on a cloud and actually did a "happy dance" on the sidewalk as Tim and I walked back to the lab. From there I did absolutely no work for the rest of the day and instead spent time talking to friends and colleagues about the defense. :) That afternoon we took the lab group out for a celebratory drink. That night Tim and I visited one of our favorite locals to celebrate. Tim ran to the restroom while I ordered and paid. When he came back he said, without hesitation, "Thanks, Doc". The suddenness of hearing it out loud caught me off guard and I burst out laughing! I made it all the way through the evening and most of the next day before I crashed for good. Thankfully, we had a nice relaxing weekend and I was able to gather my wits and return, well rested, to work the following week. When I arrived my manager had already put the business card re-order form on my desk. :) A couple days later at a full staff meeting I was thoroughly humiliated with a huge bouquet of flowers and congratulations from Wellington Zoo. :) I was so surprised, I had no words! I was stunned into silence!

It's been almost a month since defense and it still feels surreal - particularly when people say Dr. Brox or when I see my new business cards. Two and three little letters: Dr. and PhD. I'm wondering if, at some point, it will suddenly hit me like a ton of bricks. We'll see.




Book love....

Rogue Lawyer. John Grisham consistently delivers fun reads and this was no exception. :)

Saturday, January 30, 2016

Monday, January 4, 2016

Naive......

Some silly part of me thought that after I submitted my thesis and started a job with reduced hours (to start) that my life would fall back into place and I would be able to catch my breath. Wrong. So wrong.

In the last post I mentioned that I started my job the same week I submitted my thesis. With all that excitement happening I thought I should celebrate. So, in true workaholic fashion, I took a single day off. No PhD work. No Zoo work. I spent the day wandering around Wellington, sipping an iced coffee drink, perusing books at the bookstore, picking out a pair of Abstract Design earrings and finding the perfect modern style tea cup and saucer. Yes, after nearly four years we have caved and are exploring the bizarre world of tea drinking. :) I toted all my goodies home and bam! I was hit with a double bug that laid me out for over two weeks. I spent my days and nights coughing, unable to sleep for the pain. In short I was a mess and no matter how much I tried to rest and force fluids I wasn't getting any better. I missed an entire week at the job I had just started and eventually visited student health when I had completely lost my voice. Everything is funnier in retrospect but at the time I wasn't laughing when I had to lean over the reception counter and attempt to whisper that I needed to see a doctor, stat. Thankfully, I didn't have strep or bronchitis but I was still laid out for a few more days. Finally, I decided to go to work even though I wasn't completely well. My supervisor and officemate was also sick so for the next few weeks all you heard from our office was silence punctuated by chest rattling coughs. Bleh.

After my protracted recovery I started preparing for a short contract I had secured on campus: a month's worth of post doc level pay to complete molecular analysis of 43 tissue samples. I was already late on completing this work before I got sick so I was experiencing serious guilt. On top of that I knew how long the process, in its entirety, would take. Working every minute and putting in seriously long days I could've finished everything in three weeks. But that didn't account for the fact that for this type of analysis you need to schedule a machine that other people use as well. Additionally, I was also working three days a week at the zoo. So that meant every minute I wasn't at the zoo I was on campus hogging the qPCR machine and running as many samples as possible. It took about two weeks to finish the first two steps of the process for all samples. Then I proceeded to actually run them in the machine. You can run a single 96 well plate in the machine at a time. It takes about three hours to set up a single plate. Then it runs in the machine for two hours. To ensure non contamination in your samples you need to set up each plate in a laminar flow hood: translate that to sitting at a cabinet that blows cold air on you the entire time. Sigh. The best (ahem, worst) part of all of this is that with the primers I was using I could only set up three samples along with all of their controls on a 96 well plate. Double sigh. With that in mind I had to put my game face on and get to it. I tried to take advantage of the weekends because I could hog the machine as no one else was scheduling it on those days. That meant that instead of working delightfully light hours doing fun work at the zoo I was spend everything other minute on campus trying to finish running my samples. It was like being back in the midst of intensive, never ending lab work I experienced during the program. I thought this kind of schedule was behind me! Finally, at the beginning of December I ran the last of the samples!! I then spent a few more days entering, collating and analyzing the data. With great relief I am so happy to say that the work is behind me!!

So in the weeks since finishing with those samples I've been able to enjoy some time away from both jobs and it has been amazing! Now I need to put my game face back on and prepare for my upcoming defense. It was tentatively set for the end of January but I need to confirm the actual date. It is very difficult to imagine that we are approaching this point in time. Miracles do happen. :)

Choice.....

Let me take a moment to bring you up to speed on what's been happening since thesis submission. First, yes, it actually happened and I have to admit in the ensuing months I've made a conscious effort to avoid thinking about it. As soon as it was printed I was tempted to page through it. Wisely, I did not. I would've just found infuriating typos and formatting errors. Instead I walked away.

Actually, the same week I submitted my thesis I also started my dream job. Wow, I feel like a self-obsessed jerk just saying that. When I was finishing up my thesis I was checking the Wellington Zoo website compulsively waiting to see the job offer for their newly created Animal Welfare Advisor role. And one day it was there so, excitedly, I started working on my application and wondering if this was actually happening. During my time as a volunteer data collector as Wellington Zoo I had continually fantasized about doing the same type of work as an actual employee. Remember this was happening when I should've been concentrating on my thesis and final lab work but instead I ran between campus and the zoo like a crazy person. I must tell you that this volunteering opportunity was really important for me. And not just that it started a conversation about potential employment. Rather when I started collecting "small cat" data for the zoo I had just finished a particularly stressful portion of my PhD lab work. I know I've mentioned it before but I lost some, if not most, of my humanity completing those experiments. So even though the last thing I needed was more work my time spent at the zoo was downright therapeutic. Every day I went in to collect data I breathed a sigh of relief. A change of pace was exactly what I needed at the time.

So with this in mind I was exhilarated to think that I might be hired as the Animal Welfare Advisor at Wellington Zoo. But just like applications for PhD programs I was nervous. What if I didn't get hired? And what if I did? This is an entirely new type of work and I'd been traipsing through the halls of academia on and off for more than a decade. With a deep breath I submitted my application and waited to hear about an interview. I was actually on my way to visit a lab group that focuses on animal welfare research located about an hour north of Wellington. The call was great news - I had an interview for the following Monday! The rest of the day I spent touring the various laboratory facilities, learning about the specific research projects the group was working on and presenting my own work for discussion. It was an amazing day and to my great surprise I was offered a 2.5 year post doctoral position with the group!! I was gobsmacked! I had wanted to visit this group because they do a wide range of animal welfare research and considering I was preparing to enter the field it only seemed prudent to get spend some time with them. I never imagined I would be offered a position on the spot. I spent the weekend hemming and hawing about my options; both the post doc and the position at the zoo would be amazing opportunities and offered comparable compensation. I fully recognized how fortunate I was to have to options. I would have to make a decision. All I could figure is that I'd see how the zoo interview went and go from there. I mean, who knew? I never expected that I would be a shoe-in for the job and so didn't count on it being mine until an offer was made. 

I went into the interview excited and nervous as is standard for job interviews. It went well and I had a great conversation with most of the senior management team of Wellington Zoo Trust. At the end of the interview they had me scared when they said: "Right, so we had nine other applicants from all around the world apply for this position....". My stomach dropped and my mind began to race. Nine! And out of those there is a great possibility that someone has actual experience doing this type of work! Where I've barely begun and am looking to embark on a major shift from neuroscience to animal science....I have innumerable things to catch up on...... . I said my goodbyes and was escorted out of the conference room. Checking my watch I saw that I was in luck and could grab a bus up to campus within the next ten minutes. I ducked into the ladies room at the zoo entrance and then was starting to run for the door when one of the women at reception intercepted me. She said, "Are you Bridget?". To which I said yes. She went on to explain that one of my interviewers wanted to talk to me for a second before I left. I wasn't sure what to think but waited until he arrived. He asked if I had time to chat over coffee and I said yes even though I knew I was missing my bus. There would be another one in an hour. While we were waiting to put in our order he turned to me and said, "So, it didn't take us long to make our decision: we'd like you to come work with us". I couldn't reign in the huge smile that was spreading across my face - it was actually happening!!!!! From there we sat down to discuss details regarding my contract (it would be couriered out), uniform, start date and the like. I floated out of there on a cloud, caught the next bus and gave Timmy the great news!

Then I needed to make a decision: which job should I take? Weighing pros and cons didn't really work and in the end I chose the zoo. The decision was made easier because I was assured that whether I took the post doc position or not I would still have the opportunity to collaborate with these researchers and their students even while working at the zoo.

So here I am, three months into the job, buried with work but so very, very happy!!!!

Book love.....

Tricky Twenty-Two.

Image result for tricky twenty two

The Rosie Effect