I have a bunch of books from the library and I have read three already, but I just want to be productive. Since I'm currently on break, there aren't many pressing tasks. (I do have prep and paperwork for a senior research project that I've been chipping away at, and that's been good.) I actually miss biochemistry. No joke, on Christmas Day while we waited for family to arrive I explained and drew out beta oxidation (how the body breaks down fat) to my mom and grandma, who patiently listened and probably understood nothing once I started talking about acyl-CoA dehydrogenase.
Today someone suggested that I write on my blog, but I couldn't think of anything to say (What? Erin has nothing to say? Is she deathly ill?). Then I remembered a post-in-the-making that I've been adding to for a year or two, and thought this would be the perfect time to share it.
You know you're a science major when...
- You look forward to weekends because you finally have uninterrupted study time
- Your study breaks consist of reading a book or studying flashcards from a different class
- You have ever studied while sitting on the toilet or brushing your teeth
- When you discover some cool obscure fact, you feel the need to inform all your non-science-y friends (for example, pyocyanin is a blue pigment produced by P. aeruginosa and when a wound is infected by these bacteria the pus is blue!)
- It's perfectly normal to talk about bodily functions and blood while eating
- You dream about organic chemistry
- You lay in bed automatically reviewing and reciting even though the test is over
- Every school notebook has lab notes or functional groups doodled on it, regardless of what class it's actually for
- You can't have normal conversations around test time because the only words you can think of no one will understand or care
- You know a lot of Greek letters
- Words like dihydroxyacetone phosphate, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, thin layer chromatography, acetylcholine, and SDS-PAGE (sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylimide gel electrophoresis) are everyday words to you
- You use tons of abbreviations
- Autocorrect is annoying because as many times as you try to type NAD, the computer unhelpfully "fixes" it to AND
- Normal symbols like [ ] or ∆ now have different meanings
- You think certain molds are cute and stuffed E. coli or salmonella are awesome
- When you eat, you think about amylase and when you're sick, you get mad at prostaglandins
- The dumbest things in lab become hilarious because it's better than crying
- You study until you can't study anymore, and then you keep studying
- Your classmates become your family
- Even when things get frustrating or seem impossible, you press on because you love it and you know it'll be worth it in the end.
No comments:
Post a Comment