I have no excuse. It seemed like a good idea at the time. In fact, it still does. I love it! It's so much fun - it still surprises me every time I look in the mirror.
And I get such a great reaction from other people. Total randomers stopping me on the street to ask where I got it done. Complete strangers telling me how much they love my hair. And of course, it wouldn't be any fun without the disapproving stares.
Salt Lake City has (one of?) the world's largest genealogy libraries and I've invented a wonderful back story involving a long hidden family history involving an incident with an ancient Roman deity and a peacock. This is accompanied by sage head nodding, until I see the reference to bestiality make the connection in people's brains. Hilarious!
So now, I'm finishing up the very last of my research work here... In the past week I've done eight interviews, sat in on four meetings and one conference, and made a preliminary presentation of my research. It's now Tuesday afternoon and I'm on a lunch-time flight to Chicago on Friday. Between now and then, I've got another four interviews and two more meeting scheduled. The new hair makes for an AWESOME ice-breaker! :)
Researcher in Exile
An Irish interpretivist researcher moves to the US to explore an evidence-based research facility.
This thesis is going to be one hell of a boundary object!
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Monday, April 4, 2011
My last full week...
I can't believe how quickly time has flown... nor how much work remains to be done in my last week and a bit. Wowsers!
Best get on with it so!
Best get on with it so!
Thursday, March 31, 2011
It always comes down to who you know, not what you know...
I'm so happy that nepotism is alive and well in Utah.
Really, I am; because without it, I wouldn't have had one of the most interesting mornings since I got here.
I have been struggling with some access issues where I am based. Very specific issues, with specific people, who insist on setting themselves up as gatekeepers and then withhold access to the places they've been promising to bring me for (six) months. Frustrating as hell. To be fair, I have had some great access to other parts of the organisation - it's just this one specific area (and one particular person) who's proving to be problematic.
Anyway, I was talking about nepotism. A woman that I've become friendly with here brought me to a St Patrick's Day party (the irony of being the only Irish person in the house at a St Patrick's party!) and introduced me to another of her friends who works at a fairly prestigious research hospital. We were talking shop for a little while and she offered to show me around the facility so that I could see how things are done in other places apart from where I am. Yeay! A bit of rounding out.
So this morning, I met her at 7. (Yes, 7. In the morning. In order to get to the hospital on time, I had to get the Trax at 6:30, but the first bus past my road isn't until 6:40, which meant I had to walk twelve blocks (about 3km), which meant I had to leave my house this morning before 6!!!) She brought me to a treatment planning conference and then brought me on a full tour of the facility - hospital and research institute - and introduced me to heaps of people. She spent 3 hours with me this morning, showing me everything and talking me though a lot of the specifics that I was seeing. Fantastic.
And what did I have to do to get this amazing treatment? Apply for a Fellowship? Request special permissions? No. All I needed to do was serendipitously meet the right person at the right party. Proving yet again that it's rarely about what you know, and more often about who you know. And for once, at least, I'm very pleased about that. :) Happy day!
Really, I am; because without it, I wouldn't have had one of the most interesting mornings since I got here.
I have been struggling with some access issues where I am based. Very specific issues, with specific people, who insist on setting themselves up as gatekeepers and then withhold access to the places they've been promising to bring me for (six) months. Frustrating as hell. To be fair, I have had some great access to other parts of the organisation - it's just this one specific area (and one particular person) who's proving to be problematic.
Anyway, I was talking about nepotism. A woman that I've become friendly with here brought me to a St Patrick's Day party (the irony of being the only Irish person in the house at a St Patrick's party!) and introduced me to another of her friends who works at a fairly prestigious research hospital. We were talking shop for a little while and she offered to show me around the facility so that I could see how things are done in other places apart from where I am. Yeay! A bit of rounding out.
So this morning, I met her at 7. (Yes, 7. In the morning. In order to get to the hospital on time, I had to get the Trax at 6:30, but the first bus past my road isn't until 6:40, which meant I had to walk twelve blocks (about 3km), which meant I had to leave my house this morning before 6!!!) She brought me to a treatment planning conference and then brought me on a full tour of the facility - hospital and research institute - and introduced me to heaps of people. She spent 3 hours with me this morning, showing me everything and talking me though a lot of the specifics that I was seeing. Fantastic.
And what did I have to do to get this amazing treatment? Apply for a Fellowship? Request special permissions? No. All I needed to do was serendipitously meet the right person at the right party. Proving yet again that it's rarely about what you know, and more often about who you know. And for once, at least, I'm very pleased about that. :) Happy day!
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
It's completely true...
My favourite tshirt.
Never fails to get a grin.
Especially from other sexyglex wearers.
For added irony (in the Alannis Morrissette sense), I also wear it when I'm wearing my contact lenses...
Never fails to get a grin.
Especially from other sexyglex wearers.
For added irony (in the Alannis Morrissette sense), I also wear it when I'm wearing my contact lenses...
Friday, March 25, 2011
In more recent news...
My parents came to visit me last week - I don't think I've been so excited to see them EVER! I was like a small child the day before my birthday on the day I was due to go to the airport and pick them up. Like me, I don't think they were expecting much from Utah, what with it being soooooo high on everyone's list of places-to-see-before-you-die! By the time they were going, I think they'd been won over by the sheer beauty of the state - even if there is some deep oddness that goes with it. (Is there a Nobel prize equivalent for understatement? I think I deserve one!)
They arrived on Tuesday night and on Wednesday, I met them for lunch and then we went for a wander around Temple Square (because you have to, right? It would be like not going to Agia Sofia or the Blue Mosque when you go to Istanbul/Constantinople, or skipping the Acropolis in Athens) and a tour of the Beehive House. That was hilarious! Two lovely girls trying to put the hard-sell on me, my dad, and some other guy who was doing the tour: "What religion were you brought up?" My ingrained Catholic guilt made me reply "Catholic, sorry", when I've been practicing for months that the next time I get asked that question, I'll answer "I'm a Pastafarian, but my husband and kids are Jedi". Bah! Now I'll have to go back so that I can have my ésprit d'éscalier moment. Goddammit!
Tabernacle - Organ Recital |
Thursday, I met the folks at the Tabernacle for an Organ Recital. That was impressive. The acoustics in there are incredible.
Dad wanted to get a nice jacket, or rather, Mam wanted Dad to get a nice jacket, so I suggested a suit shop that I've passed on the bus every morning for the past six months, not realising it was a Mormon clothes shop. Seriously!
Click for larger view and see just what a missionary can get for under $700! |
That evening, we went to watch the Tabernacle Choir rehearsing. They were in the Conference Centre for that and while the acoustics weren't as good as in the Tabernacle, it was still an amazing spectacle. I tried to upload a short video here, but the technology gods are not on my side unfortunately.
Friday morning, we hit the road and headed south to Moab. Dad and I hiked around Arches National Park, and this time, I got to do the Park Avenue trail and actually climbed up to Delicate Arch: it was so worth it! We had dinner in Moab, before heading 50 miles further south to our (dingy) motel in Monticello.
Park Avenue trail |
Me at Delicate Arch |
At the starting line |
At the finishing line (I'm going by my chip time... I started WAY back!) |
Mam & Dad at Dead Horse Point |
Newspaper Rock Needles District, Canyonlands |
Needles District, Canyonlands |
Needles District, Canyonlands |
Wooden Shoe Bridge Needles District, Canyonlands |
Grand View Island in the Sky, Canyonlands |
Green River Island in the Sky, Canyonlands |
Mesa Arch Island in the Sky, Canyonlands |
View through Mesa Arch Island in the Sky, Canyonlands |
Schaffer Canyon Trail (yes, that is a road!) Island in the Sky, Canyonlands |
We drove back to Salt Lake City that evening, via Highway 128, which runs along the Colorado River and is the route of both half-marathons that I've run in Utah. It was lovely to drive up there safe in the knowledge that I wasn't about to get thrown out of a bus and made to run back to town!
Highway 128 |
Highway 128 |
I took a sneaky day off work on Tuesday and chilled out with the folks, cooking a big ol' dinner and my roommate Linh, her fiancé Pete, and my friend Sarah came over to meet my parents and eat and drink and generally be merry. Mam and Dad dropped me to work on Wednesday morning on their way to the airport and I'm still here, while they're off having fun in Richmond, Virginia now. Lucky ducks.
It's been a while
I've been meaning to put up a couple of posts to update y'all on my exploits state-side. I finally decided to just get on with it, instead of procrastinating further and was horrified to realise that it's been over a month since I blogged. Horror!
To follow up on my last post, I am growing to love my (not-so-)new MehBook. I don't think I'm going to rename it though, even if it no longer generates ambivalent feelings of 'meh!' for me.
So, last time, I was just about to head towards New Orleans for Mardi Gras, I mean, a Fulbright Enrichment Seminar. It was a brilliant weekend - so much fun, such a great city, and a chance to reconnect with some fairly new friends and make a couple of brand new ones. On the Thursday night, there was a welcome reception with the Mayor of New Orleans. Friday morning was spent working on local community rebuilding projects - my group was assigned to City Park, where we helped re-establish nature trails through replanted growth. It seemed a bit of a shallow task, given some of the other groups were helping with actual rebuilding projects and replanting the bayous, but the whole park was decimated during Katrina and there are only 3 full-time employees to look after the 1,300 acre park. It's an amazing amenity, close to the centre of New Orleans, and has been salvaged mostly thanks to the efforts of volunteers, so worthy enough! In the afternoon, there was some seminar stuff to deal with, followed by dinner and dancing at a local hostelry. Saturday morning brought us on a tour of the Make It Right Foundation's work in the Lower Ninth Ward. This was a strange experience for me: I felt like a voyeur, traipsing around this neighbourhood. Parts of it are still flattened, and interspersed are the most amazing futuristic sustainable houses. The work that's being done is inspiring, but the scale of what's left to be done, five years post-Katrina, is heart breaking. The Foundation started up about 3 years ago and has received around $35million from private donors; they received their first federal funds eight months ago. Eight. Months. Ago. Shocking. I think the most poignant and evocative thing I saw that morning (out of a lot of disturbing and upsetting images) was the grassy corner lot, with just the remains of a concrete garden path leading to a badly damaged and weather beaten wooden door propped up by some breeze blocks. I wish I'd had my camera with me for that one. Saturday afternoon was spent doing more seminar stuff and then, we had a police escort through New Orleans to get us to our garden party dinner at an old St Charles Avenue mansion, while we watched two parades go by outside. Mighty craic!
Sunday was spent in the traditional pass-time of getting over my hangover, wandering around town, enjoying some more parades, trying the local hangover-cure/fast food (deep fried oyster po-boy, surprisingly undisgusting) and otherwise keeping myself entertained until it was time to head back to the airport and come back to the excitement and freezing temperatures of Salt Lake City... Whooo-hoooo!
To follow up on my last post, I am growing to love my (not-so-)new MehBook. I don't think I'm going to rename it though, even if it no longer generates ambivalent feelings of 'meh!' for me.
Catching beads at a Mardi Gras parade |
So, last time, I was just about to head towards New Orleans for Mardi Gras, I mean, a Fulbright Enrichment Seminar. It was a brilliant weekend - so much fun, such a great city, and a chance to reconnect with some fairly new friends and make a couple of brand new ones. On the Thursday night, there was a welcome reception with the Mayor of New Orleans. Friday morning was spent working on local community rebuilding projects - my group was assigned to City Park, where we helped re-establish nature trails through replanted growth. It seemed a bit of a shallow task, given some of the other groups were helping with actual rebuilding projects and replanting the bayous, but the whole park was decimated during Katrina and there are only 3 full-time employees to look after the 1,300 acre park. It's an amazing amenity, close to the centre of New Orleans, and has been salvaged mostly thanks to the efforts of volunteers, so worthy enough! In the afternoon, there was some seminar stuff to deal with, followed by dinner and dancing at a local hostelry. Saturday morning brought us on a tour of the Make It Right Foundation's work in the Lower Ninth Ward. This was a strange experience for me: I felt like a voyeur, traipsing around this neighbourhood. Parts of it are still flattened, and interspersed are the most amazing futuristic sustainable houses. The work that's being done is inspiring, but the scale of what's left to be done, five years post-Katrina, is heart breaking. The Foundation started up about 3 years ago and has received around $35million from private donors; they received their first federal funds eight months ago. Eight. Months. Ago. Shocking. I think the most poignant and evocative thing I saw that morning (out of a lot of disturbing and upsetting images) was the grassy corner lot, with just the remains of a concrete garden path leading to a badly damaged and weather beaten wooden door propped up by some breeze blocks. I wish I'd had my camera with me for that one. Saturday afternoon was spent doing more seminar stuff and then, we had a police escort through New Orleans to get us to our garden party dinner at an old St Charles Avenue mansion, while we watched two parades go by outside. Mighty craic!
Photo in the mirror: Fulbrighters from around the world |
Sunday was spent in the traditional pass-time of getting over my hangover, wandering around town, enjoying some more parades, trying the local hangover-cure/fast food (deep fried oyster po-boy, surprisingly undisgusting) and otherwise keeping myself entertained until it was time to head back to the airport and come back to the excitement and freezing temperatures of Salt Lake City... Whooo-hoooo!
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
MehBook
My laptop died this morning and I am still in mourning. (Do you like what I did there? I do enjoy a bit of homophony of an evening!) Anyway, it's all very sad. A memorial service will be held in due course. Family flowers only. Donations to the 'Sinead still needs to eat, despite having to buy a new laptop' fund.
The 'silver lining' in this scenario is that I am now the rather bemused owner of a brand spanking new MacBook Pro, or as I'm finding so far, a MehBook. I'm sure that once I get used to its little foibles, get some software installed (that's proving to be unreasonably tricky, grrr!), figure out how to type euro-symbols and put fadas on my e, and generally get to grips with it I will become a convert to the mainstream cult of the Apple. Until then, I still say 'Meh!'
The 'silver lining' in this scenario is that I am now the rather bemused owner of a brand spanking new MacBook Pro, or as I'm finding so far, a MehBook. I'm sure that once I get used to its little foibles, get some software installed (that's proving to be unreasonably tricky, grrr!), figure out how to type euro-symbols and put fadas on my e, and generally get to grips with it I will become a convert to the mainstream cult of the Apple. Until then, I still say 'Meh!'
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