Saturday, November 28, 2009

The final stretch


It's November 28 today. I can't believe the term has flown so quickly by. I have one major paper left, 2 presentations with the 2 group papers we've submitted so it certainly isn't over yet.

I miss a few spare hours to do nothing (although there is a nice collection of back shows to watch collecting on the PVR). I'd like to pull out the Advent stuff (seeing as tomorrow starts Advent). But if I go into the under-eave storage, I'll be tempted to start cleaning. Okay, I'll get distracted. I have started to seriously wonder if I'm ADHD!

Back to the paper.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

My own soundtrack


I remember walking for hours as a teenager (we lived in Whitehorse; not only was it a stunningly beautiful place to live, there was no internet, 2 radio stations - CBC and CKRW - and 3 TV stations as we didn't have cable).

It was always a source of wonderment to me how people in the movies would have a soundtrack signaling the protagonists' mood and heralding future events, I wished that I could have my own soundtrack.

Fast forward 30 years. I wander to class with earplugs safely lodged in my ears, and realized that most of us ARE wandering around these days with our own soundtracks! I have a couple favourite lists that I listen to but branch out occasionally. I like this technology!

Friday, November 6, 2009

The WORST is over?

I think I may have hit apogee!

For the last three weeks I've been moving every moment from one project/paper to the next. (Or in Vancouver last weekend for a fall institute where interestingly I presented a poster on health care workers and influenza vaccinations!)

I tear myself away from writing a paper to run to a meeting for a group project. Today I ran back for 2 minutes to slap a few more words into a poorly designed paragraph so I wouldn't lose the thought (community based research and policy). Then I hopped into the car to the U of A for the group meeting (collaborative agreement assignment). When I came home I looked at another group project (community gardens) and then back to the paper... In between I try to look engaged when people talk to me, and when they call I have to determinedly look AWAY from the computer or my attention is divided and then gets suuucked into the computer. The human voice is no challenge when I'm in the middle of this stuff!

But, now the paper is 95% done. I have <4 hours of work to do this weekend, the glory of it is that I can't do more - I'm waiting for others to do their part or to get a draft back :)

Happy happy. Oh, I know that it will speed up again, but it shouldn't be that frantic. Ahhhh. Ahhh. Mmmm.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Repetitive Injury

I gave in last week and purchased a wrist protector. It keeps my right wrist from twisting or rolling (as opposed to pitch and yaw). Thanks to an inept database interface, I spend my research assistant time inputting information into a poorly constructed excel form which requires 35 stupid movements per survey (out of about 50). So in nursing terms I have repetitive strain injury.

In student terms, I think I have repetitive brain injury! This is the craziest week of them all for what has to be handed in and what's quickly coming "down the pipe". So I'm spending hours on the computer putting things together and thinking great thoughts I'm sure (if only I could recall them with coherence). Happily, one is handed in only a day late (with permission) and I'm struggling to get tomorrow's together (no hope till this weekend, also with permission).

As for influenza, Alex probably had H1N1 last week (Jocelyn's nursing class calls it the hinny flu). I have a tickly throat and a dry cough. And fatigue. No fever. Could be worse!

Monday, October 26, 2009

Egad it is Oct 26!

I knew it would be busy - just didn't think it would be THIS busy! Not to whine.

We've moved Mom W over to assisted living. She found the day of the move very difficult of course, but with the short term memory loss, she has adjusted much more quickly than we expected. That's a great thing. However, the condo is still not sorted, let alone painted or ready to sell, and that hangs over our heads. Well, more over Brian's head, since I have the excuse of homework.

Fortunately 12 hours a week is "graduate research assistant" time. That means I am the second person for double entry data for a whack of information collected for a research project called "Healthy Alberta Communities", or "HAC" for short. I'm a happy HAC-er. I go, input data for hours and while I am giving half a mind to staying accurate, redesign the interface each time (curses to poor designers!). But it is 12 hours of relative peace. Nice people there too.

The courses I'm taking. Well I'll try to be better at writing, but today we were talking about the Columbia shuttle disaster and the evils of powerpoint as a communication mechanism. Jim, our instructor was trying to get us to say PPT is evil. I'm sticking with it's terribly misused (read "Presentation Zen". As another student, John, says: guns don't kill people, people kill people...

In short, it's such great fun to play with interesting ideas. Now back to the grindstone!

Monday, September 28, 2009

Into the grind

Three courses are different from one. Yes, that's obvious, but I always worked full time and took a course simultaneously. The trick is keeping them separate. Work and a course were completely different. Right now I have two courses that the readings for each can apply to the other, and this theoretically can be a good thing. Until, of course, everyone is discussing the week's readings and I am unable to recall which readings I am SUPPOSED to be talking about. I do seem to have breadth though, if not depth!

Friday, September 25, 2009

Grad student woes


I realized in the first week that my progressive lenses are not fully sufficient for the fine print. I read about 100 pages a week, and I was getting headaches. Capitulating to the inevitable, I have purchased reading only glasses.

Wow.

I think I've been missing a lot. I think I will be able to read faster. I think the headaches will go away and I think I will be able to think!