In Their Own Words: Student Blogs

Learning Curve

Posted 05:04 PM, October 01, 2007, by luciadvm

Ohhhh... So THAT'S how job searches work...

Learning absoulutely fascinating things about life after postdoc, especially when pursuing "alternative" career pathways outside of academia. By the way, can I just throw in here that the word "alternative" in reference to non-faculty jobs is a total misnomer? With well under 20% chance of obtaining a faculty position following a postdoctoral fellowship, it is remaining in academic research that is the true "alternative" career pathway. But I digress.

Am realizing the true implications of what it is to join the "real world" of work. Up to this point, I have always been in a training position--veterinary school, internships, postdoc... the application process, and indeed application philosophy, is entirely different than that of the job market outside of hospital walls and ivory towers. Did you know that you should be applying to between two and six jobs PER WEEK? I sure didn't... It just doesn't work that way in academia, internships etc, where even applying to 10-20 places can be a lot.

Part of my problem is that I approach the job search like I approach dating; namely, that I am way too picky and don't give many jobs a chance before I write them off as being "too boring" or "not my cup of tea."

Thankfully, I have met up with some fantastic people lately, one of whom gave me the most spectacular career advice I have ever recieved (mostly to the effect of, "whatever your prejudice is against job X, get *over it* and really LOOK at what you enjoy doing and how that job might enable you to do that"). This has opened up so many doors for me, and has me focusing, among other things, on the medical device industry.

To put it as inarticulately as I can (I tried to formulate an articulate sentence here and failed, so I'm swinging the other direction), I like things that *do* things. Even more, I like things that help people do things that help other people. Has medical devices written all over it, doesn't it? I remain passionate about policy, higher education, and issues pertaining to minorities and women in science, so a career in that vein is a strong possibility as well. The good news is, I can do both, by continuing my role as Chair of Policy for the National Postdoctoral Association, my work with AWIS, and my work with medical students, but having an equally rewarding day job in industry. The reality is that any one of these areas, and probably many more that I still have not considered, are possible.

I wish that recognizing that one is multitalented, with multiple and widely varying interests, was not so frequently equated with being "flaky" or "lacks direction/purpose" or "has no goals." Not that I have ever received such feedback personally, but I know these attitudes are out there, and hope that they do not affect my job search. Have you ever noticed how people who have always been on a very straight and narrow professional pathway, never deviating from their goal from the time they were an embryo to the time they died, are spoken of very highly, whereas a varied work history is something that sometimes has to be "overcome" or "creatively dealt with?" I object. There are many things I am spectacular at, not just one. There are many things I am truly passionate about, not just one. This makes me a more complete person, not less. It also means that there are many many jobs out there that I could make a real difference in, and enjoy. The challenge is finding 2-6 per week to apply to.

Oh, I got 2nd at the Montebello Hill Climb. I realize that most of the pictures I have been posting have been cycling, but honestly a picture of me in the lab would be a little boing and cycling does take the vast majority of whatever "free" time I have... I'm the one in red and yellow, with my face hole hanging wide open (heart rate was around 184bpm at that point).

Lucia finishing Montebello HC 9.29.07.jpg

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