Wednesday, June 25, 2008

themes

perspective

Note: Skip this if you're in the mood for something light.

My boss is not doing well. When I go in there to talk to him about which restaurant we should order lunch from for our joint birthday lunch, he's open for any of the favorites: Penang, Indian, and Chinese/Thai (everyone's happy with this last one because you can order pretty much anything under the sun). But when I ask him how he's feeling, he says much better after the blood transfusion. That these two conversations can happen within the same 2 minutes is still hard to comprehend.

But we do still sit in the lunch room with the PI from the lab next door (who is my boss's age) and talk about which movies we've seen lately while I'm thinking about how Boss goes home during lunch to sleep because he doesn't have the energy to make it all day at work. The nagging question persists- what is the right balance? How much weight do you give to keeping in mind that life is so very delicate and how much to living free of thoughts of impending death? If you focus more on the first, you miss out on life, but if you focus more on the second, you take things for granted. A conundrum.

Monday, June 23, 2008

Spanish class

Check it out- my Spanish teacher:
(note: the first hola is mine, the second from my oh-so-green guide, the third from an equally impressed companion)



corrections/comments

I love it! People read the blog and correct/add/suggest/name things.

First of all: "caving in of the ground", as I so gracefully put it when speaking about disasters, is called a SINKHOLE.

Second: the following organisms were identified:

Flame Vine,
Pyrostegia venusta (Bigoniaceae)





Morning glory, maybe the US species,
Ipomoea purpurea (this one I thought was a morning glory)



Shrimp Plant, Pachystachys lutea (Acanthaceae)



Giant Ceiba Borer,
Euchroma gigantea (Buprestidae - metallic wood-boring beetles)



Apparently, the beetles are actually red metallic in color, and they secrete a film over their bodies that is this yellow color. They are the largest beetle of this class. And if you look closely at the mid-line, you can see the red tinge coming through. Beautiful!

Ahh, biologists!