Working In Science Was A Brutal Education. Thats Why I Left. – BuzzFeed News
Posted: February 19, 2020 at 8:51 am
Stephanie Singleton for BuzzFeed News
Do you miss being a scientist? some people ask.
Sometimes.
When people talk about science, they usually mean people in white lab coats doing things, like solving equations on the board or preparing solutions in beakers. What they mean is science as this crude mechanism of discovery by which humans refine over decades and centuries a small kernel of knowing. What they mean is grant dollars. What they mean is wild hair. What they mean is clean, aseptic, analytical. Brainy little robot people. White.
I try to be honest about my time in science about the feeling of satisfaction I had when I plotted all of my confocal data and there was a beautiful curve depicting the drop-off in signal as one moved further down the tissue of the gonad. I think about the calculations we did on scraps of paper to check the ratios of inheritance of the genes we introduced. I think of the little side room where we took our coffee and bagels. I think of the feeling of friendship and family that comes with being in a big lab, where everyone has a place, a role, an expertise, a skill. I remember the surprise I felt when people started to come to me because I knew something, because I could help. And how rare that was for me.
For the better part of several years, I saw my labmates every day. For hours and hours. Every holiday, every break, we stayed. We worked. We supported each other. We fought. We feuded. We gossiped. We threw parties for each other. We celebrated. We said goodbye at graduations and retirements. There were people who supported me and cherished me and looked after me. People who treated me like I mattered. A lab is a family. In a way.
Science was beautiful and it was wild and it was unknowable. Science was spending days and weeks on a single experiment with no way to know if it would work and no real way to tell if it had worked. Science was like trying to find your way to a dark forest only to realize that you had always been inside of the forest and that the forest is inside of another, greater, darker forest. Science was laughing with my labmates about television the night before, about the song of the summer, about tennis, about the unruly nature of mold growing on our plates, about cheap wings at Buffalo Wild Wings. Science was being taught to think. Taught to speak. Science was a finishing school. Science was a brutal education. Science made me ruthless. Science made me understand the vast beauty of the world.
But science was also working 15 hours a day for weeks or months. Science was working weekends and holidays. Science was being called lazy for taking a break. Science was the beat of doubting silence after I answered a question put to me. Science was being told that racism was not racism. Science was being told that I was fortunate that I had running water while growing up and that I was actually privileged because there are some places that do not. Science was being told that I was mistaken for a waiter at a party because I had worn a black sweater. Science was being told that I had to work harder despite working my hardest. Science was being told that I talked too much. Science was being told that I was too loud. Science was being told that I was behind, always behind. Science was being told that I had failed but had been gifted a pass by virtue of who you are. Science was being told that I had never once been to class despite attending every session and office hour because I was mistaken for someone else.
Science was being the only black person in the program for four years. Science was saying nothing because I was tired of being corrected about the particulars of my own experience. Science was being told that I should consider moving to the other side of town where more black people live. Science was someone suggesting that I find a church in order to find community. Science was having my hair stroked and touched. Science was being told that I was articulate. Science was watching peoples eyes widen slightly in surprise when I told them what program I was in. Science was the constant humiliation of wondering if I had justified my presence or if I had made it harder for the next black person to get admitted. Science was having to worry about that in the first place.
Science was a place I ultimately left, not so much because I wanted to, but because I had to. Science is not being able to say that because I reflexively feel the rebuttal waiting on the other end of that sentence: You could have made it work if you wanted it enough. Science is not knowing whether I wanted it enough.
Does science influence your writing?
Oh, sure. I guess.
Do you write science fiction?
No, I write domestic realism.
After the above exchange, people sometimes look at me like Im joking and at any moment will drop the faade to reveal that I do in fact write and love science fiction, after all.
But no, I do not write science fiction. I think that if people knew more scientists and spent significant time in their company, they would understand that the worst possible preparation for a career as a science fiction writer is an intensive science education. My training as a scientist makes it difficult to absent myself in the way I need to in order to write good fiction. I can never turn off the part of my brain that knows about protein folding or microscopy or tissue preparation or stem cells or physics or chemistry. Writing science fiction would be an extended exercise in pedantry.
People presume that science and writing are quite different. But they are both ways of knowing. They are ways of understanding the greater mystery of the world. They are systems of knowledge and inquiry. I do not understand something until I have written it, or more accurately put, until I have written my way through it.
Science was being the only black person in the program for four years. Science was saying nothing because I was tired of being corrected about the particulars of my own experience.
I think in many ways, the best preparation for a writer is a period of prolonged and rigorous thought about a difficult and complicated question. You learn to assemble your resources. You learn to fight with yourself. You learn to quarrel on the page with your worst ideas and with the ones you hold dearest. You treat your expectations with suspicion. You demand proof. You demand evidence. You think hard about the alternate hypothesis or other explanations, and you devise strategies to root these out. You learn to live with doubt. You try to prove yourself wrong. You look for places where you have been too soft. Too vague. You eliminate language that contains falsehoods. You eliminate language that can mislead your reader. You ask questions. You pursue answers with all the energy you can muster. You try to put language to what it is you observe. You develop a stamina for iteration. You develop a thick skin. You learn to seek criticism. You treat criticism like kindness. You churn the raw material of life into something that can be understood, and when you fail, you marvel at the mystery of things.
Do you miss science?
Yes. No. Yes. No.
Sometimes, when I dont feel well, I consider the question of how to derive an expression for the degradation of a molecular species in a particular tissue under a given set of circumstances. Old calculus. I turn to YouTube lectures from MIT about thermodynamics. I think of my first winter in Madison, Wisconsin.
The first snowfall was in October. It had been a hot, rainy summer, so much so that the weather seemed to turn all at once with very little warning. I was either in the middle or at the start of my second rotation as a biochemistry graduate student, working in a biophysical chemistry lab and spending most of my day in the windowless instrument facility in the basement. My project was to deduce the effect of protein concentration on the ability of a polymer of DNA to wind itself. I spent a lot of time pipetting various liquids into each other in little cuvettes, slotting them into a machine, and then waiting for the reading. It was the kind of work to which I felt ideally suited, and I could have gone on that way forever. I had recently moved to the Midwest from Alabama to pursue a PhD, and it seemed as likely as anything else that I would go on pipetting and measuring the effect of things like DNA polymer length and protein concentration on DNA winding. It was as removed from the circumstances of my previous life as anything else, and so I didnt have a compelling reason to doubt that this would be the shape my life held.
But I remember sitting down at the desk in the lab and looking out the broad window. There was a large tree at the center of the courtyard that had recently turned yellow. Fall was there in name, but not in temperature. The labs were kept quite cold, and so I wore a sweater indoors and shucked it as soon as I got outside. But that day, I looked out of the window and saw snow drifting down. The flakes were thick and fluffy, and they seemed almost fake. It was the first time I had seen snow in years, and I was totally enamored by it. The other people in the lab were on edge because snow in October portended something dark and awful a hard winter, a long, brutal freeze. Where they saw inconvenient travel and slushy roads, I saw something beautiful if frivolous, a minor novelty. Winter came early that year, and it didnt end until the very beginning of the following summer. When I went to the lake on my birthday in early June, there was still ice in the water.
People presume that science and writing are quite different. But they are both ways of knowing.
When people ask me about my time in science, it is this day which presents itself to me in jewel-like clarity. It is the day something about my life altered irrevocably. Or perhaps it is that the snow has accumulated, the way all such moments do in life, the weight of meaning, of prophecy. Inevitability is an artifact of retrospection. It is because the snow represented a stark deviation from the previous course of events in my life, at the precise moment when my life was changing so wildly, that I remember it. It is not that the snow changed me, but it came at a point when I was starting not to resemble myself. I cannot use the snow to explain to people what my life was like in science. It has the whiff of superstition, folklore. It feels too much like a memory and not enough like an answer. I do not tell them about the snow or how it seemed a benediction at the outset of something I needed desperately to work.
It was only later that I realized this was wishful thinking, and that the snow was just snow.
Do you think youd ever go back to science?
That part of my life is over now.
Ive come to understand that what people want in such a situation is to have their own conceptions of the world confirmed. That is, they want me to say that when you leave science because you have written a novel and a book of stories and have decided to attend an MFA program in creative writing, you are doing something that is antithetical to science. People presume that it is akin to picking up and leaving your home in the middle of the night under great duress, never to return. What they want is the spectacle of the forgotten treasured item, the confirmation that something has been lost, perhaps forever.
I think if people knew what it was that I left, then theyd know better than to ask. It would be like asking someone if they were sad to have left their home with no prospect of returning. It would be like asking someone if they were sad to have left their faith behind. It would be like asking someone if they were sad to have given up some fundamental idea about who they are. It would be like asking someone if they were sad to have watched their life burn to the ground. It would be like asking someone if they were sad to have left their family and friends.
They would mind their own business if they knew.
But they do not know, and so they say things like Science, wow, thats so cool, like, do you miss it?
And I smile because that is what I have learned to do. Because explaining is too hard. Too messy. There is no clean or easy or simple way to make it known to others that I left because I had to, because it was necessary to leave that I do miss it, but I also dont because Im still that person but not that person, that every day I remind myself less of the person I was then. Its sad, like losing a memory of myself, and all those years are lost to me now, all the little tricks and habits of home dropping down and away, as I become this other person known for this other thing, and its too much in the moment to say that I miss it both more and less every day, that I become a person more capable of appreciating what is lost in the grand scheme of things but less a person who knows what it is Ive actually lost, and that there is some painful, brutal, awful misalignment in the scale of those two losses.
When people ask if I miss science, the only answer available to me is an incomplete solution to the problem: Yes. No. Sometimes. Its over now.
Brandon Taylor is the senior editor of Electric Literatures Recommended Reading and a staff writer at Literary Hub. His writing has earned him fellowships from Lambda Literary Foundation, Kimbilio Fiction, and the Tin House Summer Writer's Workshop. He holds graduate degrees from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the University of Iowa, where he was an Iowa Arts Fellow at the Iowa Writers Workshop in fiction. Learn more about his first novel Real Life here.
Read more from the original source:
Working In Science Was A Brutal Education. Thats Why I Left. - BuzzFeed News
- Secret History of Diamonds Narrated for the Visually Impaired - Part 2 of 4 [Last Updated On: June 24th, 2011] [Originally Added On: June 24th, 2011]
- Skin Stem Cells: Their Biology [Last Updated On: June 24th, 2011] [Originally Added On: June 24th, 2011]
- Emerge Labs New Anti Aging Swiss Apple Stem Cell Skin Care [Last Updated On: June 25th, 2011] [Originally Added On: June 25th, 2011]
- No Avastin for Breast Cancer [Last Updated On: June 25th, 2011] [Originally Added On: June 25th, 2011]
- Signals Skincare System [Last Updated On: June 25th, 2011] [Originally Added On: June 25th, 2011]
- Signals Skincare System [Last Updated On: June 25th, 2011] [Originally Added On: June 25th, 2011]
- Growing Nerve Cells [Last Updated On: June 26th, 2011] [Originally Added On: June 26th, 2011]
- Elaine Fuchs Part 2: Tapping the Potential of Adult Stem Cells, and Summary [Last Updated On: June 26th, 2011] [Originally Added On: June 26th, 2011]
- A Major Breakthrough in Skin Care and Nutrition [Last Updated On: June 27th, 2011] [Originally Added On: June 27th, 2011]
- Stem Cell Facial At Metamorphosis Day Spa Using Emerge Labs Skin Care [Last Updated On: June 27th, 2011] [Originally Added On: June 27th, 2011]
- Come Back Kid [Last Updated On: June 28th, 2011] [Originally Added On: June 28th, 2011]
- PhytoCell.mp4 [Last Updated On: June 28th, 2011] [Originally Added On: June 28th, 2011]
- When Beauty Calls: The Link between Science and Skin Care [Last Updated On: June 29th, 2011] [Originally Added On: June 29th, 2011]
- Skin Stem Cells: Their Biology [Last Updated On: June 29th, 2011] [Originally Added On: June 29th, 2011]
- Come Back Kid [Last Updated On: July 1st, 2011] [Originally Added On: July 1st, 2011]
- PhytoCell.mp4 [Last Updated On: July 1st, 2011] [Originally Added On: July 1st, 2011]
- The Skin Gun stem cell research [Last Updated On: July 1st, 2011] [Originally Added On: July 1st, 2011]
- World's 1st Nutricosmetic with Stem Cell Nutrients [Last Updated On: July 2nd, 2011] [Originally Added On: July 2nd, 2011]
- NG Raccoon Attack [Last Updated On: July 3rd, 2011] [Originally Added On: July 3rd, 2011]
- No Avastin for Breast Cancer [Last Updated On: July 4th, 2011] [Originally Added On: July 4th, 2011]
- E'shee HBA Global Expo 2011, NYC. Skin Care Anti-Aging Symposium [Last Updated On: July 5th, 2011] [Originally Added On: July 5th, 2011]
- Growing Nerve Cells [Last Updated On: July 9th, 2011] [Originally Added On: July 9th, 2011]
- The Skin Gun [Last Updated On: July 9th, 2011] [Originally Added On: July 9th, 2011]
- E'shee HBA Global Expo 2011, NYC. Skin Care Anti-Aging Symposium [Last Updated On: July 14th, 2011] [Originally Added On: July 14th, 2011]
- A Major Breakthrough in Skin Care and Nutrition [Last Updated On: July 17th, 2011] [Originally Added On: July 17th, 2011]
- Elaine Fuchs Part 1: Introduction to Stem Cells [Last Updated On: July 20th, 2011] [Originally Added On: July 20th, 2011]
- World's 1st Nutricosmetic with Stem Cell Nutrients [Last Updated On: July 21st, 2011] [Originally Added On: July 21st, 2011]
- Stem cells acquired from human skin [Last Updated On: August 9th, 2011] [Originally Added On: August 9th, 2011]
- Stem cells acquired from human skin [Last Updated On: August 17th, 2011] [Originally Added On: August 17th, 2011]
- DermaStem Renewal Serum - Stem Cells for Your Skin from STEMTech - New Paradigm in Beauty! [Last Updated On: August 19th, 2011] [Originally Added On: August 19th, 2011]
- DermaStem Renewal Serum - Stem Cells for Your Skin from STEMTech - New Paradigm in Beauty! [Last Updated On: August 30th, 2011] [Originally Added On: August 30th, 2011]
- ReLuma-stemcells- skin rejuvenation [Last Updated On: September 5th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 5th, 2011]
- Dr Nathan Newman- Formulator of Stem Cell Skin Care Line LUMINESCE [Last Updated On: September 5th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 5th, 2011]
- Genetic Skin Disease (EB): Spotlight on Stem Cell Research - Patient Advocate [Last Updated On: September 5th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 5th, 2011]
- Genetic Skin Disease (EB): Spotlight on Stem Cell Research - Patient Advocate [Last Updated On: September 5th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 5th, 2011]
- Stem Cell Skin Care- What is the role of stem cells in Luminesce Featuring Dr Nathan Newman [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2011]
- Luminesce Stem Cell Skin Care - Leaders in Jeunesse [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2011]
- The Skin Gun (Stem Cell research to replace burnt off skin. Done in 3 days!) [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2011]
- Stem Cell Skin Care- What is the role of stem cells in Luminesce Featuring Dr Nathan Newman [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2011]
- Isolation and Culture of Adult Epithelial Stem Cells from Human Skin [Last Updated On: September 9th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 9th, 2011]
- Genetic Skin Disease (EB): Spotlight on Stem Cell Research - Welcome [Last Updated On: September 9th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 9th, 2011]
- Stem Cells Made From Human Skin [Last Updated On: September 9th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 9th, 2011]
- Jeunesse Global Business Opportunity with Stem Cell Skin Care Developed by Dr Nathan Newman [Last Updated On: September 10th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 10th, 2011]
- Stem Cell Therapy Skin Repair and Anti-Wrinkle Cream [Last Updated On: September 10th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 10th, 2011]
- Stem Cells Made From Human Skin [Last Updated On: September 10th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 10th, 2011]
- Genetic Skin Disease (EB): Optimizing Embryonic Stem Cell Differentiation Protocols [Last Updated On: September 10th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 10th, 2011]
- Genetic Skin Disease (EB): Spotlight on Stem Cell Research - Introduction [Last Updated On: September 11th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 11th, 2011]
- Isolation and Culture of Adult Epithelial Stem Cells from Human Skin [Last Updated On: September 11th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 11th, 2011]
- Stem Cell Therapy - BioLogic Anti-Aging Skin Cream [Last Updated On: September 12th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 12th, 2011]
- Best natural skin care serum using stem cell technology [Last Updated On: September 12th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 12th, 2011]
- Jeunesse Global Business Opportunity with Stem Cell Skin Care Developed by Dr Nathan Newman [Last Updated On: September 12th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 12th, 2011]
- Genetic Skin Disease (EB): Optimizing Embryonic Stem Cell Differentiation Protocols [Last Updated On: September 12th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 12th, 2011]
- The Skin Gun (Stem Cell research to replace burnt off skin. Done in 3 days!) [Last Updated On: September 12th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 12th, 2011]
- Research on skin cancer: ERC funds studies on stem cells [Last Updated On: September 23rd, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 23rd, 2011]
- Skin engineering [Last Updated On: September 23rd, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 23rd, 2011]
- Stem Cell Banking: The Perspective of an iPS Donor Family [Last Updated On: September 23rd, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 23rd, 2011]
- Jeunesse Global Opportunity- Stem Cell Skin Care [Last Updated On: September 23rd, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 23rd, 2011]
- Dr Nathan Newman Repairs Laugh Lines With Stem Cell Face Lift [Last Updated On: September 23rd, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 23rd, 2011]
- Dr Nathan Newman MD Stem Cell Face lift On Extra TV.flv [Last Updated On: September 23rd, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 23rd, 2011]
- Dr Nathan Newman Stem Cell Face Lift on Entertainment Tonight [Last Updated On: September 23rd, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 23rd, 2011]
- Dr Nathan Newman MD Stem Cell Face lift On Good Morning LA.flv [Last Updated On: September 23rd, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 23rd, 2011]
- Ellis Martin Report with International Stem Cell Corp [Last Updated On: September 24th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 24th, 2011]
- Dr Nathan Newman MD Stem Cell Face lift on Channel 7 KABC.flv [Last Updated On: September 24th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 24th, 2011]
- Stem Cell Face Treatment - What People Are Saying | Beverly Hills | Los Angeles [Last Updated On: September 24th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 24th, 2011]
- How To Use Your Stem Cells For Facial Skin Rejuvenation [Last Updated On: September 25th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 25th, 2011]
- StemCellTV - From National Geographic - The Skin Gun - Healing Burns with Stem Cells [Last Updated On: September 25th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 25th, 2011]
- AMAZING - Stem Cell Skin Cream And Liquid Face Lift Revealed [Last Updated On: September 25th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 25th, 2011]
- Care for Your Skin with Lifeline Skin Care [Last Updated On: September 25th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 25th, 2011]
- For Damaged Skin - Rejuvenate Your Own Stem Cells [Last Updated On: September 26th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 26th, 2011]
- Stem Cells: Fulfilling the Promise - 2011 CIRM Grantee Meeting [Last Updated On: September 28th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 28th, 2011]
- Dr.Thomas Barnes' PRP Hair Growth and Skin Rejuvenation [Last Updated On: September 28th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 28th, 2011]
- Stem Cell Face Lift - English (Part 5) [Last Updated On: September 28th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 28th, 2011]
- Dr Amiya Prasad discusses ACell for Hair Regrowth and Skin Rejuvenation with EYES IN Magazine [Last Updated On: September 30th, 2011] [Originally Added On: September 30th, 2011]
- Brussels scientist close to discovering skin cancer origins [Last Updated On: October 5th, 2011] [Originally Added On: October 5th, 2011]
- Cell Reprogramming Transformed [Last Updated On: October 6th, 2011] [Originally Added On: October 6th, 2011]
- Cell Reprogramming Transformed [Last Updated On: October 7th, 2011] [Originally Added On: October 7th, 2011]
- Elaine Fuchs Part 1: Introduction to Stem Cells English Subtitle [Last Updated On: October 10th, 2011] [Originally Added On: October 10th, 2011]
- Elaine Fuchs Part 1: Introduction to Stem Cells English Subtitle [Last Updated On: October 13th, 2011] [Originally Added On: October 13th, 2011]
- Elaine Fuchs discusses research on skin and adult stem cells - Video [Last Updated On: October 13th, 2011] [Originally Added On: October 13th, 2011]
- Signals Stem Cell Skin Care Anti Aging Skin Care - Video [Last Updated On: October 13th, 2011] [Originally Added On: October 13th, 2011]