Saturday, March 29, 2014

PhD notes

I'm considering getting my PhD and have been doing a lot of reading. I got into Georgia Tech and Columbia University for their EE programs (fully funded!)

PDF
http://polaris.gseis.ucla.edu/pagre/grad-school.pdf

Videos
Why is getting a PhD so hard? eloquently answered by Threemonththesis.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHdZRPDvgt8

How to get through your PhD without going insane
 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4MkRMp3roKQ
Notes:
An idea has to be original but it also has to be founded in current research in the field.
You need to know the field to know that your work is original, aid your own results, and give your work context and justification. You need to know the field before you can make meaningful contribution to it.

Literature is a resource to u can't learn a subject by reading a research paper b/c it's written to folks who already know the field.

To filter, focus on the best and most relevant papers first. Look at the # of citations (~500).
Then, look at relevance. There may be only 3 other research groups in the world in your field. You can easily become the 5th world leader on a topic.

If you know the outcome in advance, then it's not research.
It's often when things go wrongs that is the best results.

Constantly adapt to the things that happen. (the guy who created antibiotics)

The determining factor of success: what you do when things aren't going according to plan. That's a vital skill in research.

PhD is not inherently difficult. It is your personal reaction from within you to the situation.

You have to give yourself time to think. That's what makes you valuable as a researcher.

Writing:
1. content - data  (this is your foundation)
2. structure - how do you frame it
3. words - how you express it
4. your voice

You have to write as an academic to other academics.

You should see stress as a signal that something is not right.

Success or failure in the PHD is not a value of who you are.
If I fail, I fail. I've at least given it a good shot.

Monday, March 10, 2014

Sex & the Christian Woman

     I think one of the reasons why many young Christian women are so tormented by these desires is because today’s society is expecting men and women to wait until their education is complete, their careers are started, and their bank accounts are padded until they marry. This means that most will not marry until their mid-20s to mid-30s. I am certainly not in favor of Christians just marrying the first person who comes along so they can have their sexual desires fulfilled. I’m also not advocating that young Christians marry at 18, 19, 20 before they have had time to mature and figure out who they are and what they want to do with their lives. However, if at some point in your life, God brings in a person with whom you relate well, share common values and goals, and grow to love, what’s the point of waiting to marry until you’ve finished college, your master’s, get your first job, can afford a big wedding, etc.? Interminable waiting will just subject you to greater and greater sexual frustration and temptation. Better to marry at the court house and strike out together with faith in God, than to fall into sexual sin. 

--Comment on an interesting blog post "Sex & The Christian Woman" by Cassi Clerget

Thursday, December 5, 2013

I've been really inspired by Celiz Cruz lately!

They say glory and suffering are two sides of the same coin!

I've gotten into Celia Cruz's music and am just enamored with her enormous talent. J. Lo's tribute performance at the AMA's is what got me familiar with it. Celia had such a powerful voice that could go from a high octave to a low octave quite easily. She had rhythm ("la negra tienne tumbao!") and an infectious smile! But there was a lot of pain behind the music. Although she sang about Cuba and represented her culture throughout the world, she actually was never able to return to her country before she died. She couldn't even attend her mother's funeral in 1962! Look at the translation of her adlibs to her song "Bemba Colora":

A few years ago I came out,
From my lovely little piece of land ,
And I still remember ,
Its streets and ravines ,
Their huts , I adored
Gripping palms .
Always, always they were roofed
With pieces of old yagua .

....

A bird in a cage
Fly fly and ceaselessly
And always looking for the sea
If you saw where escape
Poor thing, ay, suffering
Seeking their freedom , and ,
I like the bird I
Regain my freedom ,
Come, come , come, come
Come, come , come, come ,
Come, come , come, come

Before I understood her lyrics, I felt it. Her vibrato sprang from such a deep place that resonated with humanity over Latin beats. She sang with a lot of power but most of it was fueled by a life marked with nostalgia. She became a citizen of the world and brought her Afro-Cuban culture all over the globe. Everyone knows "Guantanamera". Everyone. Fate could not have chosen a more suitable candidate for such a destiny, no?  Kudos to the Creator for an awesome entertainer.

What an inspiration to advance our cultures and empower our communities with positive music.

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Time & Eternity

A question that is on my mind is how a Christian monotheist is supposed to think about time and the future. C.S. Lewis touches on the topic in his book The Screwtape Letters.


"To be sure, the Enemy wants men to think of the Future too—just so much as is necessary for now planning the acts of justice or charity which will probably be their duty tomorrow. 
The duty of planning the morrow's work is today's duty; though its material is borrowed from the future, the duty, like all duties, is in the Present. This is not straw splitting. He does not want men to give the Future their hearts, to place their treasure in it. We do. His ideal is a man
who, having worked all day for the good of posterity (if that is his vocation), washes his mind of the whole subject, commits the issue to Heaven, and returns at once to the patience or gratitude demanded by the moment that is passing over him. But we want a man hag-ridden by the Future—haunted by visions of an imminent heaven or hell upon earth—ready to break the Enemy's commands in the present if by so doing we make him think he can attain the one or avert the other—dependent for his faith on the success or failure of schemes whose end he will not live to see. We want a whole race perpetually in pursuit of the rainbow's end, never honest, nor kind, nor happy now, but always using as mere fuel wherewith to heap the altar of the future every real gift which is offered them in the Present."
-Letter XV, The Screwtape Letters



 In reference to the italicize part, I wish I were like that. Just do what I can do for the day, "commit the issue to heaven", and leave it at that, not wasting any effort on worrying about the future.


A biblical perspective on time:


Psalms 90:4 - For a thousand years in thy sight [are but] as yesterday when it is past, and [as] a watch in the night.

Psalms 90:12 - So teach [us] to number our days, that we may apply [our] hearts unto wisdom.


Ephesians 5: 16 Making the very most of the time [buying up each opportunity], because the days are evil. 


















Try not to put your heart in tomorrow. It may get broken. Instead, put your faith and trust in the God of tomorrow who will not fail us.

Monday, September 23, 2013

You are not alone (Mavis Staples)


This song just brought me to the Lord's feet...

Her's a quote:
If God is necessary to us, then to take him out of our lives is to plunge us into the most terrible sense of loneliness and abandonment that mankind can know. We have all experienced it to some small degree when we get what we want and then discover we do not want what we got! For that sense of bored emptiness to go on forever, is unspeakable torment." -Ray Stedman

Here's an excerpt from Christian Think Tank website:
And its not really that difficult...Jesus said that children could respond to Him...Children are not 'blind faith' types at all--they are VERY careful about who they trust. It's amazing to watch children in the markets--some adults they trust, and some they don't...they make "assessments of trustworthiness" instinctively...they don't ask for proof, or ask for evidences; they watch the person...Cognitive Development types tells us that this occurs between the ages of 3 and 4--we ought to be able to do this!

So it is with Jesus...just "watch Him"...watch Him as He speaks words of healing to broken lives, as He speaks words of judgment to oppressors and religious phonies, as He rejects crowds who want to make Him a national king, as He quietly goes His death and humiliation at the Cross, as He comforts and reassures His disciples after their trauma...
....
If you REALLY want to know God--as a person, not a thing--and approach Him with an open and generous attitude, He will show His heart to you. He will probably use a variety of communication methods--the bible, true disciples of Jesus, intuition, experiences of awe, bizarre coincidence, stories from others, music and beauty--but He is God, and can reveal His heart and thoughts to you--without disclosing Himself to those who are NOT open or ready...
 (www.christianthinktank.com)

Saturday, May 11, 2013

Photographer Follows His Girlfriend Around The World

http://www.boredpanda.com/photographer-follows-his-girlfriend-around-the-world-murad-osmann/

In his photo series “Follow Me To”, Russian photographer Murad Osmann is taking the viewer on an intimate journey together with his girlfriend who’s leading him around the world. The pose is almost the same in every picture: the girl never shows her face, and the guy almost never lets go of her hand. The settings change from Moscow to London to Venice to a number of different locations in Russia, revealing their passion for travel.
“For me photography is about capturing things other people might miss. It’s a way to communicate,” says Murad. Well, his loving message of trust is very clear in these photos, enjoy!
Website: muradosmann.com

Sneak peek:

Passion & Purity Notes

hunger not of the belly kind, that's banished with bacon and beans,
But the gnawing hunger of lonely men for a home and all that it means;
For a fireside far from the cares that are, four walls and a roof above;
But oh! so cramful of cozy joy, and crowned with a woman's love
-Robert Service

I will not offer to the Lord my God whole-offerings that have cost me nothing...

Matt. 19:12 12 For there are eunuchs who were born that way, and there are eunuchs who have been made eunuchs by others—and there are those who choose to live like eunuchs for the sake of the kingdom of heaven. The one who can accept this should accept it.”

Isa. 54:5 For your Maker is your husband—
    the Lord Almighty is his name—
the Holy One of Israel is your Redeemer;
    he is called the God of all the earth.

1 Cor. 7:34, 35  An unmarried woman or virgin is concerned about the Lord’s affairs: Her aim is to be devoted to the Lord in both body and spirit. But a married woman is concerned about the affairs of this world—how she can please her husband. 35 I am saying this for your own good, not to restrict you, but that you may live in a right way in undivided devotion to the Lord.

Loneliness
1. Be still and know that He is God.
2. Remember that you are not alone.
3. Give thanks.
4. Refuse self-pity.
5. Accept your loneliness.
6. Offer your loneliness to God.
7. Do something for somebody else.

A little quiet reflection will remind me that yes to God always leads in the end to joy. We can absolutely bank on that.

It doesn't really matter whether the man is getting along in life. He may be president of Exxon. So what? It doesn't matter if he's a Christian, actually. What matters is is he coming back?...Call a spade a spade or even a muddy shovel. 

C.S. Lewis's vision of purgatory was a place where milk was always boiling over, crockery smashing, and toast burning. The lesson assigned to the men was to do something about it. The lesson for the women was to do nothing. That would be purgatory for most of us. Women, especially when it comes to the love life, can hardly stand to do nothing.
 https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?A3=ind1209&L=WERC&E=base64&P=1934640&B=------_%3D_NextPart_002_01CD9718.A4B8E998&T=image%2Fjpeg;%20name=%22image001.jpg%22&N=image001.jpg
(I have often had the fancy that one stage in Purgatory might be a great big kitchen in which things are always going wrong - milk boiling over, crockery getting smashed, toast burning, animals stealing. The women have to learn to sit still and mind their own business: the men have to learn to jump up and do something about it. When both sexes have mastered this exercise, they go on to the next. ~C.S. Lewis, Collected Letters, to Mary Willis Shelburne, 31 July 1962 )

  "Men want to play around. They lead us on, try to get what they can out of us, deceive us," and so on. True enough. Which is exactly why I beg women to wait. Wait on God. Keep your mouth shut. Don't expect anything until the declaration is clear and forthright.
And to the men I say be careful with us, please. Be circumspect*.
 *Wary and unwilling to take risks.

The school of suffering. Christ took the course. He asks us to take it, too-but not alone. He calls us into the comradeship of fellow students, disciples, willing to undergo the rigorous program that the Father prescribes the Son. 

For my loneliness, Lord- Your strength.
For my temptation to self-pity, Lord-Your strength.
For my uncontrollable longings for this man, Lord- Your strength.

(“Measure your progress by your experience of the love of God and its exercise before men…
In contrast, servile, base, and mercenary is the notion of Christian practice among the bulk of nominal Christians. They give no more than they dare not withhold. They abstain from nothing but what they dare not practice. When you state to them the doubtful quality of any action, and the consequent obligation to refrain from it, they reply to you in the very spirit of Shylock, “they cannot find it in the bond.” 

In short, they know Christianity ONLY AS A SYSTEM OF RESTRAINTS. It is robbed of every liberal and generous principle. It is rendered almost unfit for the social relationships of life, and only suited to the gloomy walls of a cloister, in which they would confine it.

But true Christians consider themselves as not satisfying some rigorous creditor, but as discharging a debt of gratitude. Accordingly, theirs is not the stinted return of a constrained obedience, but the large and liberal measure of voluntary service.” — William Wilberforce, Real Christianity)

It is the yielding, not the temptation itself, that is sin.


What looked to Jim like “militant morality” was partly the knowledge that is deep in a woman that she holds the key to the situation where a man’s passions are involved. He will be as much of a gentleman as she requires and, when the chips are down, probably no more, even if he has strict standards of his own. This is not necessarily because he wants to go as far as possible. It is sometimes from a confused sense of obligation, or even chivalry, to meet her expectations.

 "Keep your distance," I say to women. Recognize that fundamental anomaly of human nature, that we prize what we cannot easily get. We take for granted and even come to despise, that which costs us no effort.

 Unless a man is prepared to ask a woman to be his wife, what right has he to claim her exclusive attention?