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The Story Collider

Grief: Stories about dealing with loss

The Story Collider

Story Collider, Inc.

Arts, Science, Society & Culture, Personal Journals, Performing Arts

4.4824 Ratings

🗓️ 8 April 2022

⏱️ 41 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this week's episode, our storytellers' lives and careers in science are shaped by a great loss in their lives.

Part 1: When neuroscientist Macayla's partner is diagnosed with brain cancer, she's forced to make some tough decisions.

Part 2: When Anant Paravatsu struggles in school, his mother comes to his rescue.

Macayla is a recovering academic neuroscientist who just lost their spouse to brain cancer, and lost a career she had worked a long time for at the same time. She has a really cute dog if you need a pick me up after that bummer of a sentence.

Anant Paravastu holds bachelor's (MIT, 1998) and Ph.D. degrees (UC Berkeley, 2004) in chemical engineering. His Ph.D. research with Jeffrey Reimer focused on using lasers to control nuclear spin polarization in the semiconductor GaAs. From 2004 to 2007, he worked as a postdoc at the Laboratory of Chemical Physics at NIH with Robert Tycko, where he learned to apply nuclear magnetic resonance to structural biology. Paravastu's early structural biology work focused on amyloid fibrils of the Alzheimer's β-amyloid peptide. He was part of the team and community that showed that amyloid fibril formation is a complex phenomenon: individual peptides exhibit multiple aggregation pathways capable of producing distinct aggregated structures. Between 2008 and 2015, Paravastu worked as an assistant professor at Florida State University and the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory. Presently, his laboratory at Georgia Tech pursues three general lines of inquiry: 1) structural analysis of rationally designed peptides and peptide analogs that assemble into nanostructured materials, 2) nonfibrillar aggregates of the Alzheimer's amyloid-β peptide, and 3) aggregation due to misfolding of proteins driven away from their natural folds.

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

A science story, huh?

0:04.0

Is NYU scientist the...

0:06.0

I felt...

0:07.0

It felt...

0:08.0

I was so...

0:09.0

And I just thought, well...

0:10.0

It was that golden moment.

0:13.0

Because science was on my side.

0:15.0

Hey, everyone. Hey everyone, welcome to the Story Collider, where we bring you true personal stories about science.

0:29.4

I'm your host, Aaron Barker, and this week's episode is about grief.

0:33.8

And specifically for these storytellers, the way grief has influenced their lives and careers in science.

0:40.5

Our first story today is from Michaela Donagan.

0:44.0

It was recorded at one of our live stream shows in February at the tank here in New York City.

0:49.2

The theme that night was, take care.

1:09.3

Thank you. night was take care. So in September of 2020, I got a call from my partner, Will,

1:12.9

and he was confused and slurring his words.

1:15.8

And he told me that he was on his way to the emergency room.

1:18.5

And he had had these weird headaches for a couple of weeks.

1:23.1

So I got into a car and rushed over to the emergency room.

1:25.3

And I met his dad there. And it was just like terrifyingly crowded in the times of pre-vaccine COVID.

1:31.5

But we went into this crowded ER just in time for Will CT results to be read.

1:39.0

And there was something about the size of a golf ball in his frontotemporal lobe, and whatever that something was,

...

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