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I really like research....depends on the lab and the caliber of the work though.
beefballs said:I learned that really hate research
LJDHC05 said:After 3 years (2 summers+1year full time) in the lab I've learned that:
-The current NIH grant review system is complete crap
-Macs are better than PC's because they're shinier
-Researchers get so little respect from clinicians that it makes me sick
-No one in my institution outside of research actually even knows that research is going on
-My liver hurts from my co-workers' drinking habits
-Some of the coolest developments come completely by accident
-Submitting a publication is the most anti-climactic event of my life
-Some post-docs can be real duesch bags. I'm not your f***ing cabana boy, nor am I your secretary. My job does not include running over to Staples for binder clips. Nor does it include babysitting your undergrads so that they dont break my $300k microscope. Nor does it include running around and collecting signatures for your 30th grant application this week. Just because you published 3 papers during your undergrad and have an adjunct faculty position at harvard doesnt give you the right to give me crap about being less productive than you were. You may eat, breathe and drink this stuff but this is only a job to me, when my 45-50 hour per week is up, I'm off the clock.
-Other post docs are the coolest people on earth because they take you fishing or give you red sox tickets or buy you beer!
-Technicians and grad students are the real scientists doing science, post-docs and PIs just come up with the experiments we do
-Research is a multi-billion dollar pissing match between really smart and stuborn people.
-Research, Baseball and porn are the only places where rediculous facial hair styles are acceptable every day.
-Western Blots suck to optimize
-There arent enough hot women in science
-Being slightly computer literate and knowing how to handle a screwdriver makes you more competant in life than a PhD
-I really dislike baby chickens. If I never decapitate another baby chicken again, I would be a happy man.
-Really pretty pictures get a paper published faster than solid stats
-They dont pay me enough to do what I do
-No one could pay me enough to do this job for the rest of my life
eikenhein said:it takes 3 times longer to get things done than expected.
Sooo true.Thundrstorm said:I also learned the following:
If you stay late or come in on the weekend, your experiment will not work.
Rockhouse said:I'm not talking about anything science specific at all. So I'll start with my own example. I learned that PhD students often times don't know $#!t, but love to flaunt their supposed knowledge in front of undergraduates. However, when pressed to the issue in front of mentors, they mumble and provide a lot of excuses. I'm not going to lie, this is partly a way for me to b!tch about a PhD student I work with... because recently she informed me that liquid nitrogen is really just dry ice with some other things mixed in it. I mean seriously, how do some of these people get accepted into graduate programs?
wow.Haha, I've seen that lots of times, but they only do that with the media (LB or CYE), not with actual bacterial cultures.omgwtfbbq? said:Someone even mouth pipeted! (but at least that didn't expose anyone else)
TheProwler said:Haha, I've seen that lots of times, but they only do that with the media (LB or CYE), not with actual bacterial cultures.
LJDHC05 said:A) isnt that really, really bad aseptic technique?
B) I'm pretty sure that pipetters arent that expensive. I'll give whoever you saw doing that a pipette bulb for free!!!
ND2005 said:I'm pretty sure the post-docs in my lab don't understand how pipette bulbs work. If we didn't have the fancy auto-pipettors they'd be wandering around holding their serological pipettes with a confused look on their faces, like lost children.
LJDHC05 said:-There arent enough hot women in science
Rogue Synapse said:Brother, you need to come to the University of South Carolina School of Medicine's grad school. They seriously must secretly prescreen any potential PhD candidates for hotness, must include a picture in the application or something. Starting to regret going over to the MD side of things, because dayum.
Yes, probably, and the pipette bulbs are sitting right next to them, they just take a little longer to use.LJDHC05 said:A) isnt that really, really bad aseptic technique?
B) I'm pretty sure that pipetters arent that expensive. I'll give whoever you saw doing that a pipette bulb for free!!!
Saluki said:One more thing that I learned from lab- I really love the part where you sterilize things with alcohol and fire... It's a satisfying feeling to feel like you're accomplishing things...

LJDHC05 said:A) isnt that really, really bad aseptic technique?
B) I'm pretty sure that pipetters arent that expensive. I'll give whoever you saw doing that a pipette bulb for free!!!
TheProwler said:I would feel terrible killing little yellow chicks. 🙁
TheProwler said:I would feel terrible killing little yellow chicks. 🙁
That's why you leave the room during the twitching part; I learned that on day one.lilmissangel said:I learned to not volunteer in a research lab if I don't have any lab experience (freshman yr) because you are bound to get assigned a really unpleasant task (gassing poor little mice). They twitch and twitch..... 🙁
altho i'm sure its not as nightmare inducing as decapitating little chicks- oh, I feel ur pain
Thundrstorm said:I love sterilizing things with flaming alcohol. I like playing with fire, and my research gives me an excuse to do so. I do a lot of immunofluorescent studies, where I need to grow cells on glass coverslips. So I have to individually sterilize 30 or 40 coverslips a few times per week, and I find it way more enjoyable than I should. I also have way too much fun making patterns with the sterilized coverslips in my tissue culture dishes. And every time I do this, I have to fight the strong urge to drop a flaming coverslip into my petri dish full of of EtoH and see what happens. The only thing stopping me is the story my PI told me my first week... about a summer student who somehow ignited a a whole bunch of spilled EtOh in the hood and started a fire. Hmmmm, I wonder if she saw the fire lust in my eyes, and made up that story to warn me.![]()
LJDHC05 said:I felt sick to my stomach the first couple times, now I find myself unconsciously gritting my teeth in disgust when I'm injecting the pentabarb and decapitating.
CADreaming06 said:1)Choose your baymate/neighbor well, you might be sitting by this person for 6 years (and that can really suck if you don't like them).
CADreaming06 said:2)Stop people pleasing - do the experiments that will get you out, cut out the ones "just to see" - its okay not to agree with everything your PI says, although find a way to express that diplomatically
CADreaming06 said:3)Trust your intuition regarding a result - let your experiments tell you the truth regarding a question, rather than your expectations/hypothesis/PI's wishes
CADreaming06 said:4)Establish mentor relationships outside your lab/PI - you'll have them forever, and they don't have the stress/expectations that your relationship with your PI has
CADreaming06 said:5)Get your own space (yes, we are psychotic about our desks!)
CADreaming06 said:6)Have a good friend in lab - it makes a world of difference when you are going through the hard times.