Thursday, April 23, 2009

The Graduate School Conundrum

The general presumption of four years of education in an IIT culminating in an entry into one of those big graduate schools took a hit this year, thanks to economic recession. Having worked towards securing a PhD position (not an MS, I repeat to those poor souls who fail to understand the difference between the two even after incessant tutorials) over my last 3 years, the recession scare could not have been more daunting. My research stays in labs of high repute made the search for a university that offered a balance between a dynamic young professor and a department of credibility even more meticulous as there generally exists no decipherable trade off between the two.

After exercising critical portions of prejudice in choosing universities amidst those debates with friends, the selection paved way to the “proffing” ritual. Mails seeking the existence of any possible refuge in their heavenly abode by patronizing their already well established scientific expertise ensued. I received courteous replies encouraging me to continue with my application process. These first signs of acceptance, created more jubilation than what was actually intended.

The all encompassing statement of purpose was next on list. Summarizing your years of achievement in a few lines gives you that feeling of belittling those months of focused effort. But I still savored those moments with a sense of gratitude to the people who made it all possible. In what seemed like eternity, the recommendations and the final application packet did reach their destinations just at the neck of time. Thus began the wait for the inevitable.

Graduate forums and discussion groups were the new demi gods and they received all time hits. The refresh button on the browsers suffered fatal onslaughts and I was sure that time had frozen. Then one fine day Illinois, Urbana Champaign sent me its reject saying that this time the number of applicants far exceeded the number of available positions and they had to reject excellent students also. The next few weeks saw a steady influx of rejects from Wisconsin-Madison, Michigan, Delaware, California-Davis stating the same reason. Immersed in a sea of despondency, I started contemplating what the possible reasons for my rejection could be.

My “friendly” neighbors (Tanwar, Mota, Goofy, Rohit, Chansa) took advantage of this situation and woke me up with a daily “reject alarm”. For those who are unaware of the “reject alarm”, it is the repetition of the word “reject” thrice in a monotonous tone with a “knock-knock” on the door after every “reject” –inspired by the all invincible Sheldon from Big Bang Theory. I tried to reason out to people that getting an MS is much easier than a PhD as the already jobless Masters graduates might have definitely applied for a PhD and the latter application is subjected to far more scrutiny than the former.

But I guess all this went into deaf ears as the friendly “reject alarm” still kept ringing throughout the day. Contemplating on the alternatives took most of the time as I prepared myself to intern abroad for the third consecutive year.

April 15th greeted me with another reject from Massachusetts, Amherst and with Rensselaer, New York remaining, only a faint hope evinced when I received a mail from the latter’s department. The department specialist asked me whether I was still interested in their graduate program. I replied positive and received a letter from them the next day saying I was being recommended by the department for a fully funded PhD.

As is the case with human nature to overlook minor details at times of extreme happiness, I along with my friendly “reject alarm” neighbors took the “subject to approval by the graduate admissions office” clause as a given. There were others too who testified this act and the weekend seemed uneasily joyful.

I woke up the next Tuesday morning to receive a mail from the university saying I was rejected on the grounds of my GPA being less than 3 on a scale of 4. At first sight, this seemed more like a spoof mail from my friendly neighbors. But repeated reading drilled in the news. The agony and the embarrassment set in pretty soon as I started thinking about the wishes from people near and far. The mission to prove that their conversion system was not fair, involved many elite people to whom I am really indebted to. I sent in documents and recommendations from my references in support of my argument and several correspondences were exchanged between the university and me.

Last Monday saw a mail from them telling me that they are still talking about this but the conversion seemed very difficult. They advised me to take up another offer if I still had one. Also, the professor who wanted me was now unsure of taking me due to financial concerns. Things seemed to be slipping away as she said that she hoped to get back to me later that week.

Friday morning, I woke up to an email that said “I believe an offer should not be headed your way by tomorrow or early next week”. Now, although my english comprehension skills were above average, all that I could decipher from that one line was that the wait was still on. But there was something weird about the “an offer not headed your way” phrase. I forwarded the email to my list of elite people and even before I could imagine, I started receiving condolences from quite a few of them on my supposed rejection.

In one of those infinite chat conversations that I was having with my peers, few suggested that the email might have suffered from a typing mistake and what she actually meant was that an offer was headed my way early next week. Counting on my lucky stars, I wrote back asking her to clarify if a decision was still pending or whether I was out. Guess what? I received just that anticipated reply!

As I draft the last line of this article, all I can do is keep my fingers crossed hoping to get that final offer letter not followed by a rejection mail again!

Friday, April 10, 2009

Being the Instrumentalist


The omnipresence of music amongst us is indisputable. Be it the choice of songs we listen to or our bathroom operas that never cease to end. Most of us envy those lucky few who were born in a family with a musical history. Perhaps they got the best gift they could ever dream of – learning the art of the masses. Mostly unaware of what they were up to in their tender ages, they had infact set out on a fulfilling journey to dictate the forces of nature!

As we all can presume, playing a musical instrument is an accepted sign of creativity. The right part of the brain that is intuitive and dominated by feelings is believed to control the left side of the body. This explains how easy or difficult it is to coordinate the fingers of our left hand to play a particular tune after listening to it.

Left handed people are acknowledged as gifted artists as creativity and coordination go hand in hand. Some of such great musicians who have taken center stage for their pure genius include Beethoven, Jimi Hendrix, Paul McCartney (Beatles), Kurt Cobain (Nirvana). Unfair that only one out every ten of us is left handed. There is also another belief that long fingers are an indicator of superior artistic skills. Of course there are exceptions and what’s more pleasing than training ourselves to outdo the naturally talented!

Playing a musical instrument is arguably one of the best outlets for accumulated emotions. Needless to say it’s a crowd puller beyond comparison. For enthusiastic beginners, the mandolin is a perfect start – small and pleasing to the ears. U. Shrinivas, one of India’ finest exponent in classical music is my personal inspiration. An alternative to this kind of discrete music is the continuity provided by the bowing of the violin. The brisk or long bowing bring about the associated rush and melancholy. Their combination encompasses pretty much the world of string instruments.

Tutorials go in vain without dedication and practice. I had the honor of meeting the amazing violin brothers Ganesh-Kumaresh recently and they told me that just as we dedicate 12 years of our life in scholastic education, one should invest a minimum of 12 years in music to compete among the greats. I guess 12 years is a tough ask, but we sure can pull in a few hours during our week.

Its definitely a passage to re”creation”

Sunday, April 5, 2009

In motion

Age derails most of our enthusiasm for activities involving running. The best medicine for accumulated fat and idle brains, one should take the running ritual seriously. Running needs minimum resources – a pair of sneakers and of course the undaunted determination. To me running is one of those cherished ways of reminiscing childhood – run for fun

I do not intend to bore you talking about the benefits of running but will list a few interesting facts which I believe will get the ‘bulls’ out in you (cheetah is the fastest land animal but is reported to not have good stamina, infact if it has to catch an antelope it has to do so in the first minute or less, as the antelope will outrun the former after that).

The heart of an inactive person beats 36, 000 more times each day than that of a runner, as running keeps the arteries open and the blood flowing smoothly. Deep breaths during running force one to use more than 50% of unused lung power. Smokers can regain their complete lung potential through running.

Yet the most motivating part of running transcends the physical benefits that we usually imagine. Addiction to running is common among serious runners as the intense ecstasy and euphoria that one experiences after a run can be compared to a literal “high”. Research says that this unadulterated exhilaration comes from a betaendorphin release that is triggered by the release of the neurons in the nervous system in order to remove the pain that one generally associates with running. This addiction can supersede drug, alcohol and even food addictions.

I know its funny thinking of people getting high on running, but the science behind it definitely makes us think beyond the obvious.