Archive for the 'food for thought' Category

Nov 23 2008

What to say?

Published by Hayley under argh!, berkeley, food for thought, work

In case you didn’t know, the amount of detail required to fully submit your dissertation is a little overwhelming.  It’s as if they know that you’re at the end of your rope, about to annihilate everyone around you, and just when you think you’ve saved yourself from complete insanity, you get that final test…  on whether you know how to read (and follow) directions.

Did you ever do an exercise in grade school, where you’re given a piece of paper with all these designs with numbers on it (sort of a color-by-number type thing), and the teacher says,

“Alright.  This is a lesson in listening.  I will read ALL of the steps FIRST.  Then I will read them AGAIN and follow them.  The first time through, you are JUST LISTENING and NOT DOING ANYTHING.”

And then, the teacher reads through 30+ steps of instructions…

“1.  Color #5 blue.  2.  Color #17 green.  etc….”  the VERY LAST ONE of which says:

“Do not color anything with any color, starting from Step 1.”

And, of course, most of us zone out by the time the teacher reads to the end the first time around, and we  miss the all important last step…

The ONLY student in the entire class who got it right was the blind girl.

ANYWAY.  It’s sort of how I’m feeling about the ridiculous red tape of forms, surveys, formatting, and hoop jumping…  I’m trying to do all the right things and I just know at the end they’ll probably send me back to reprint my whole dissertation because I forgot to double space my abstract or some other ridiculous thing.  The Berkeley document for “Instructions for Preparing and Filing Your Thesis or Dissertation” is 34 pages long.  That’s almost exactly 1/3 the length of my dissertation.  Thanks for making me feel inadequate about the last six years of my life, Berkeley!

One of the more interesting (read: not mind-blowingly irritating, like making sure all of the page numbers on your dissertation are at least 3/4 of a inch away from the edge of the page) things we are required to do is complete an exit survey (called “Survey of Doctoral Students’ Opinion” which, I don’t know, just sounds ridiculously pompous for some reason)  Besides the usual demographics, they ask for some actual feedback.  One is to list the worst and best course you took, which I wish they asked as a undergrad.  I guess they really don’t want to know your opinion as an undergrad…  haha!

In any case, the set of questions that caught my attention were the following, under the category of “General University Experience”

“What was your best academic experience at UC Berkeley?”

“What was your worst academic experience at UC Berkeley?”

and

“If you could change one thing at Berkeley, what would it be?”

And I was blown away.  One multiple levels.  First, they have a lot of guts to ask such questions of tired and jaded grad students.  Second, they actually might care to know this sh*t?  For real?!   Third, what does it mean (or not mean) that I could not immediately formulate an answer for any of them?  And Fourth, it really blows that I had to answer each question in less than 75 words.

What to say?

4 responses so far

Oct 19 2008

Not to be racist, per se…

Published by Hayley under argh!, family, food, food for thought, ryan

but I truly do not understand how ‘white people’ (ok, ok, anyone know anyone who has grown up eating their grapefruit like this?!  I need a survey on the demographics of this population.)  eat grapefruit. And by ‘white people’ I mean anyone who cuts it crosswise and scoops out the flesh with a spoon. This is the image I have seen on TV growing up, at the breakfast buffet in hotels, etc…

I grew up in a grapefruit loving home (well, my dad loves grapefruit but my mom just kinda screws up her face and says it’s too bitter, and my dad and I would end up eating most of it) and we would always just peel the grapefruit like an orange, separate the slices, and then peel the thick skin off the individual slices with our hands. Definitely not as refined as eating a grapefruit with a nice spoon. But at least it doesn’t squirt you in the eye, leave lots of mashed up pulp, and a puddle of leftover juice. Plus, I think it feeds my OCD tendencies to make myself a nice pile of peeled grapefruit to savor. Yum.

Ryan says he doesn’t think he can take me out to a nice brunch anymore, since I don’t seem to want to eat my grapefruit in a civilized way. I say, if we’re busting out the big bucks for a nice brunch, I certainly won’t be wasting my precious stomach space on some grapefruit…

PS. Don’t tell me I need one of those pointy grapefruit spoons with the serrated edges. I need a set of those like I need another tokidoki bag.

9 responses so far

Mar 04 2008

Can I? Should I?

Published by Hayley under food for thought, ryan

I’ve been contemplating giving up my cell phone. Ryan wants to switch over to his work phone, because (a) it would be free and (b) his razr sucks. The problem is, he’s the primary account holder on our Verizon account, and Verizon sucks and won’t let us switch names on the account, so I’d have to sign up all over again on a new plan with them… which means I might as well switch providers all together! (Why should I give them my business when they don’t want my business?!!) I used to have a fantastic plan with the Identity Crisis Company (AT&T/Cingular/AT&T) but of course now all of the big cell companies basically have the same crap plan for everyone.

So, I’ve been thinking - do I REALLY need a cell phone? I mean, gosh, I’ve had one since maybe freshman year of college… pretty much 10 years. But I never really pick up my phone anyway (I’m sure most of you can attest to this) and I’d probably get a land line instead. Plus, the thought of not having a phone sounds rather appealing. If someone really wants to talk to me, they can email me. Or call my work line. Or Ryan. Ha!

Besides, no one really calls me anyway, except Ryan and my parents. Ryan actually sounded kind of excited at the thought of saving even more money (going from a $100/mo cell phone bill to $0) but his face fell a bit when I asked the real question: Can HE survive if I didn’t have a phone?

Maybe I need to do an experiment - one week with no cell phone. What do you think?!

11 responses so far

Jan 15 2008

It’s a losing battle…

Published by Hayley under animals, argh!, family, food for thought, work

or rather, it’s already been lost:

Mosquito: 9 course feast on me, 2 on Ryan (and counting)

Me: 0

I woke up a few nights ago at 4AM to intense itching on my arm… stumbled into the bathroom and saw an angry red bump glaring back at me. I returned to bed, pep talking myself into thinking that *perhaps* the offending bugger had left the bedroom… and just as I was drifting off I heard the infernal buzzing near me and knew that sleep was going to elude me. Instead I decided to curl up with a novel in the living room.

An hour later a sleepy Ryan peeks out of the bedroom, telling me to come back to bed… and we leave the light on to stalk the mosquito. After about 30 minutes there was still no sign of it and I concluded it must have passed out in food coma and wouldn’t bother me again. Oh, I was so wrong…

The next evening I started scratching my face… then my left hand… then my left arm… then my right arm… I found five red spots.

The next morning I found more…

Can I declare defeat? Surrender? Something?!!

There must be some way to barricade my entire apartment with a non-toxic form of DEET… right?!!!! Maybe I need to change my research track from stem cells to mosquitoes… bioengineer a strain of mosquitoes that don’t feed off humans… but feed off of disgusting flies…

Did I ever tell you I hate bugs? Except for the pretty, useful, or industrious ones that don’t bother me.

PS. Happy Birthday Dad!!!!!

4 responses so far

Jan 09 2008

Sadly true:

Published by Hayley under food for thought

Computers make it easier to do a lot of things, but most of the things they make it easier to do don’t need to be done.”

Andy Rooney, American journalist

One response so far