On July 15, 1931, I was born in
Brooklyn, New York. I am now 82 years
old living in Bloomington, Indiana. My
life has taken me from New York City (22 years) to Bloomington, Indiana (5
years) to Kingston Ontario (2 years), to Los Angeles (8 years) , to Setauket,
New York (42 years), and back to Bloomington (3 years so far). I have enjoyed a
life as a scholar, a professor, a geneticist, a historian of science, and a
writer. I have enjoyed being the father
of five children and seeing them launch their own careers and families. I learned my own (and Helen’s) inadequacies
in a first marriage that failed after four years. I have enjoyed 54 years of a happy marriage
with Nedra and we have never failed to encourage each other through our relatively
rare moments of self-doubts. I was not fully on my own with a permanent job
until I was 27 as a freshly minted PhD.
During those two years in Canada I learned how to publish my research,
how to get grants to support it, and how to teach. For the scholar the process of becoming
independent takes time. At UCLA I became recognized as a geneticist, a scholar,
and a teacher. I enjoyed a busy laboratory
with six students obtaining their PhDs. It
was also the 1960s, an era that was searing in its social turmoil on
campuses. It profoundly changed what I
taught and shifted me away from the laboratory and into teaching non-science
majors as my response to the needs of the 1960s. It also shifted me to Stony Brook University
where I could develop my Biology 101-102 course using a “humanities approach.” When I turned 65 I did not feel old but I
gave myself five years to explore what I wanted to do when I retired. My Lifelines
column was a result of that effort and I continue to enjoy bringing the
life sciences to an adult public that prefers the “humanities approach” to what
is called popularized science. I see the former as stimulating our world view
and the latter as adding to our factual understanding. Both are needed but I find the humanities
approach relatively uncommon.
I did not begin to feel old until I
was in my mid seventies. Aging is like walking through a mine field and you
never quite know what is ahead. I have been fortunate that no major surgeries
have come my way and my mind is still alive, curious, eager to learn, and eager
to share what I have learned. I can’t
count on that luck to accompany me for what my physician desires “of seeing you
through to your 90th year and after that, we’ll see.” I have a modest arthritis
compared to my father whose gnarled fingers and frozen joints still haunt my
memory. The greatest gift of retiring at
70 was the freedom it gave me to write as much as I wanted and at my own pace,
subsidizing my own scholarship and not having to worry about earning a paycheck
or honorarium. For this I give thanks to Andrew Carnegie who introduced the
TIAA retirement program for professors.
Without his foresight I would have had to subtract five books from my
publishing record, wondering when, if at all, I could find time to write them.
1 comment:
Happy birthday Elof! I was looking for your address - and your blog was the closest I could find. I had gotten linked to the websites below earlier today - and I thought of you of course, and all your wonderfully risque stories about Bridges! Hopefully the film makes it to the mainstream..
http://www.the-scientist.com//?articles.view/articleNo/36594/title/A-Fly-on-the-Wall/
http://www.theflyroom.com/
So if you have a chance do get in touch - I'd love to catch up.. (and very glad to see you got to 'go home..'!).
best wishes, Al
ahandler@ufl.edu
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