I'll ask the SDN hive's opinion on my acknowledgements. Several people on my committee think it sounds too "bitter" and that I will regret writing it in 10 years. I strongly disagree and chalk it up to almost nobody having had these experiences. Everyone else just writes "I want to think my parents and my PI", but I don't have family support and nobody recognizes that. This whole MD/PhD thing was entirely because I pushed like hell for it against everyone's "advice". As a result, I am truely grateful when people are supportive of me and have my best interests in mind, and I want that to stand out. It's my right to put whatever I want, and I will, but I'm grateful for any feedback from the SDN hive. Oh, and it's right at the length limit as it is so no more adding 🙂
Names have been removed to protect the innocent.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
It was 1997 when I was awarded my general education diploma after leaving high school. I would like to acknowledge everyone since then who told me that I wouldn't, couldn't, and shouldn't. First, those who told me I wouldn't go back to college. This is followed by others who told me I could never succeed as a pre-medical student with such little preparation. Then it was those undergraduate advisors who told me I shouldn't do an MD/PhD program. "You can't do both" I was constantly admonished, along with frequent other pieces of "advice". My favorite was always the old adage that "the MD/PhD program does not award you a REAL PhD, but something more like a MS degree". This thesis stands as my testament that they were wrong.
I thought once I began at Penn that I had heard the end of wouldn't, couldn't, and shouldn't. Yet, somehow I found many lab doors closed to me. Some labs couldn't take more graduate students. Others wouldn't take MD/PhDs. Others I shouldn't have joined, according to my advisors. Indeed, my graduate advisor at the time told me I could never succeed in an MRI lab. To him, I would be wasting my time without years of intense preparation in physics and math. I am glad I did not heed his words. It was instead my PI (his name here) who told me "I once had a music major come into this lab and he was one of the best students I have ever had. If a music major can do it, you can do it." It is no wonder he became my advisor. For this, and many many other things, to him I am grateful and will always be so.
I must recognize my family for the direction (but not support) they have given me. After I was born, my mother had a psychotic break from which she periodically and incompletely returns. When I was eight, my father learned he was dying of alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency induced cirrhosis, and our lives were forever changed yet a second time. As the only child of a truck driver and a store clerk, I feel like I have been fighting my whole life. Yet, I always had one advantage. My grandmother, an orphan of the great depression, somehow knew in the early 1980s that computers would become the great tools of the future. She put the TRS-80 Color Computer 2 in front of me when I was 3 years old, and a programmer was born.
Those who know me know that I take challenges head-on--with sincerity, honesty, and broader vision, and I acknowledge those who have cared to see me for that. To X Person and Y Person whose helpful discussions shaped both several portions of this thesis and my own career ambitions. To Z Person, and A Person who are continuous sources of information and optimism. To B Person and C Person whose technical discussions have made much of this work possible and have enriched my knowledge of MRI research. To D Person and E Person who have been both my helpers and friends. There have been many others who have helped me along the way and I lament that I can not name them all, but some deserve special mention for their frequent and exceptional support: F Person, G Person, H Person, I Person, J Person, and K Person. I thank you all.