Category Archives: Week 7

Searching for Entropy

While all of the presenters were great, I connected to Dr. Lawrence David’s talk the most. It wasn’t the overview of his science that drew me in, it was his call to be okay in discomfort (and even seek it). I have moved 8 times, so often times whenever I start to become comfortable in the new setting, I have to move to another place. Like Dr. David, I learned to not only embrace this discomfort but also to revel in it. It was funny when he almost questioned if he would stay at Duke long term, because I also find myself bored whenever I stay at a place longer than a couple of years. Afterwards, however, he mentioned something about him being okay with staying at Duke as long as he gets to create discomfort another way. By challenging himself to work with new concepts, new departments, and just being open to new ways of thinking.

That really resonated with me, because for the longest time, my discomfort has been set by external factors- moving to new places, meeting new people etc. During this time, you have all of the motivation to question who you are, who you want to be, and change accordingly.  But this discomfort eventually dies down, and it leads to a phase of being entirely too comfortable with your own self and ideologies. It’s nice, but nice is static. There isn’t any growth. If that phase comes when I am at Duke, I will use his saying and “create discomfort another way”. I will find ways to challenge my views, my morals, and create discomfort within myself so that I don’t have to rely on external factors to motivate my growth.

Aside: My Quora description used to be “college student searching for [insert monotony antonym]”, but now I have changed it to searching for entropy.

Hearing about HIV

In the past couple of weeks, we have had a lot of amazing, accomplished speakers, all at different points in their careers, come talk to us about life and science. Each talk has been fascinating, with a new life story and lens to look at research every time.

Of all the talks, the one that stuck with me most was given by Dr.Mary Klotman, as she gave some really interesting insights into HIV research. Previously, when learning about HIV, I always looked at it from a social perspective, rather than a scientific one. Thus, her talk taught me a lot about the mechanism of the disease. For example, I did not know that the virus uses kidney cells for long term storage. Additionally, I did not realize that the virus actually integrates into a hosts genome, making it difficult to find a cure. It was really fascinating to hear information about the symptoms and pathway of the disease from someone who has seen it in both a clinical setting and laboratory.

I think her experience with seeing patients living with HIV really made her talk stick with me. Her anecdotes about the experiences of patients, from those being taken care of by their mothers to those who killed themselves, made the talk even more impactful. She did research on HIV back when it was a guaranteed death sentence, and hearing how that impacted patients along with the science behind it made the talk a good blend of social and scientific.

Overall, Dr.Klotman’s talk on HIV was fascinating and informative. It was really a privilege to hear from someone with such breadth of experience as both a doctor and a scientist.

Week 7 – Faculty seminars – pick one and reflect on that talk

Due Sunday, 22 July, 5 pm