Showing posts with label graduate school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label graduate school. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Nora's arrival, part 1--the calm before the storm.

On the whole, my pregnancy was pretty easy. Sure, weeks 6-16 featured monster "morning" sickness that extended all day and reduced me to huffing vanilla in public. But once I got into the second trimester, it was pretty much smooth sailing.

It was fortunate that I was feeling good, because I had a lot to do. You may have noticed a severe drop off in posting around the first of the year. That's because my job market process kicked into high gear around then. I was flying to interviews all over the place, including a few in Europe. My last flight was just a week before the airlines would start refusing to let me on the plane. And I felt pretty good, albeit a little tired. I wasn't particularly huge (go tall lady!), and I managed to avoid a lot of the third trimester discomfort that most women experience.

No sooner had I finished the interview circuit, and I had to turn my attention to defending my dissertation. The goal was to finish my thesis, send it to my committee, and do the oral defense before the Goober arrived and changed our lives forever. I set the date for 2 weeks before my due date, figuring that either the Goober would hold off until I finished, or I'd have a great story to tell.

The process of defending the dissertation is remarkably anti-climatic. You turn in the thesis 1o days before the defense. You give an hour long talk. They ask some questions. They pass you. Frankly, by the time you get to the oral defense, they've already decided you should graduate. In my case, I already had a job lined up. They couldn't fail me. At the same time, I wanted the talk to be worthwhile. It seemed silly to work so hard for six years and give a lousy, half-assed talk at the end. So in the week or so between when I handed the draft to my committee and when I had to defend, I planned to make my talk really shine.

But during that week, things started going down hill. I was having some difficulty getting the talk in order. I had to present considerable background, plus three very different models in less than an hour. Plus, my luck seemed to be running out, pregnancy-wise. I was feeling extraordinarily tired. My feet were swelling up. Over the weekend, I felt so sick that I thought I was coming down with the flu. On Monday, our traditional beer night, I seriously considered staying home, because I didn't think I could make it all the way downtown. The walk took a lot out of me, and I got a ride home. I couldn't concentrate on my talk for more than a few minutes at a time. I did the best I could, and figured it would have to do. I thought that it must just be the third trimester creeping up on me. After all, women are supposed to be uncomfortable near the end, right?

My talk was on Tuesday. I felt ok that morning--better than I had been feeling in the days before. I picked up the paper work I needed and tested out the equipment. Ross handled all of the snacks, and set up a feed so my parents could watch my talk. The talk itself went very well, though I felt pretty distracted throughout. I felt really hot up on stage, and a couple of times I lost my train of thought. I had to take a seat for the questions at the end, and I was so warm that I felt kind of faint.

I spent Wednesday making some of the corrections my committee wanted done. My goal was to have them done by Friday.

My OB checkup was scheduled for Thursday at 3 pm. That day, Ross and I went on a walk after lunch. We were planning to have one more cocktail party that weekend, before the baby came. Ross wanted some raspberry sugar for a special cocktail he was concocting, so we walked to Kerrytown. I was tired enough when we got down there that I contemplated staying there until my appointment and then cutting across--saving a small amount of walking. But there was a seminar I wanted to attend, so I trudged back to campus. I remember thinking that I was lucky that the bad part of pregnancy had held off for so long--I had only 10 days to my due date, and I was just starting to feel lousy. Famous last words.

After my seminar, I dragged myself down to the OB clinic. It's only a mile or so from campus to the university hospital, where the clinic is located. I had been walking a lot throughout my pregnancy--both because of my travel schedule and because we just like to walk more than we like to drive. I'd walked to all of my OB appointments--a fact that baffled the folks at the clinic desk. So a mile would normally be a trivial distance for me. In fact, we'd joked that I could just walk to the hospital when I went into labor. But that day I was feeling pretty bad--and we'd already walked all the way downtown and back--so I seriously contemplated taking the bus. In the end, I decided to walk, not so much because I wanted to, but rather because I didn't feel up to figuring out which bus to take down. Since I never left the hospital after I checked into the OB clinic, I'm able to say that I did walk to the hospital for delivery after all.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

A post as scattered as my brain

I'm starting to feel the end of the summer looming. This sucks for several reasons.
1) I hate Michigan winters!
2) Thanks to a particularly cool summer, I have ~4000 green tomatoes on the vine, and have gotten exactly 4 ripe ones.
3) The end of the summer means the end of my high productivity and the start of job-market madness.
4) I have a grant proposal due in two weeks...a grant proposal that is in its twinkle-in-my-eye stage.
5) Did I mention how much I hate Michigan winters?


I still don't know what I'm teaching this coming semester. Good thing classes start late this year--Sept 8th.

On a related note, I have no idea how much I'll be making next semester. I could be teaching
.25 (8-12 hrs/wk)
.5 (18-25 hrs/wk)
or
.75 (35-45 hrs/wk).
Needless to say, this uncertainty (and the associated income uncertainty) scares me a little bit.


We spent this past weekend moving everything out of Ross's apartment (we're hopefully renting it out this fall). It now looks like something exploded in our living room.


The cats have an ongoing battle over a chair we brought from Ross's place--a chair that will forevermore be known as The Best Chair On The Planet.


We've started training Roxy to be less of a little shit. We're using something we've decided to call "ham therapy".

Ham Therapy:
Step 1: pet cat
Step 2: feed her chunks of ham
Step 3: repeat

She's responding quite well.

Did you know that a package of ham chunks costs less than a similar-sized package of cat treats, and is approximately 1 zillion times better (according to the average cat polled in our living room).


My brain is working about 1/4 speed right now. Could you tell?

Friday, October 3, 2008

I'm not dead! I swear!

So it's been a while, I know. I have a good reason, though. If you might remember from my list of goals, I am going on the job market this year. Given the amount of time that particular goal is sucking up, I am hereby revising my list of goals.

Goals for 2008-2009
1) Get a job.
2) Stay sane.

I think that I can accomplish that.

Anyway, this is my way of saying that posting might slow down a bit. I'm hoping to use blogging as a break from writing my thesis. However, that activity competes with such perennial favorites as eating, sleeping, petting my cats, and kissing my husband, so that may not happen. In the meantime, here is a short play-by-play:

1) The kitten is huge. Like, the size of a small adult cat. We're thinking of renaming her Mongo. I need to take more current pictures, but here's one from a few weeks ago. Maggie is still unimpressed.

2) The garden has been hugely productive. We've had over 100 tomatoes, probably 25 Anaheim chilies, a ton of carrots, many many lemon-drop peppers, pounds of potatoes, and more lettuce than I know what to do with. Our plot has to be cleared out by the 16th. I'll try to do a final count before then.

3) I got an Ipod touch.
Ok, so it actually belongs to Ross, but he lets me play with it, and I'm plotting a way to steal it for myself. So it's kind of mine already.

4) I think that the bread shop around the corner from me is run by the mafia. I would go into more detail, but I wouldn't want them to find out. In fact, on second thought, I definitely don't think that the bread shop is a front for an illegal drug business. Not at all.

5) I have developed a tremendous addiction to the show House. Ross is even more addicted than I am, which seems impossible considering how much of my addiction is fueled by Hugh Laurie's devastating attractiveness. I even liked him as Bertie Wooster. Ross, on the other hand, has no excuse.

6) I have thoughts on the financial crisis, the bailout, and the presidential and vice presidential debates. Some of them are even worthwhile. But I don't have the energy to write them up. Sorry about that. Maybe next time.