Wednesday, June 17, 2026

This Is Beautiful: Job Decided!

 I finally did it earlier this week, I made a decision and I'll be moving to North Carolina in the fall! It mostly feels good to have a plan and have that weight off of my chest. I got very lucky and had to decide between two main options that would have both been fine, but this one was slightly more ideal for my career path. But I will have a job! And it will even be a job that is directly applicable to my skillset and career path! So all good things.

Saturday, June 13, 2026

“A Wizard of Earthsea” by Ursula K. Le Guin

This was a fun read, but not my favorite. Every single time I love the idea of reading Le Guin, and I love the ideas, but I just don’t vibe with her writing style. Which frustrates me, I want to like her stuff but something just doesn’t click.

This book follows Sparrowhawk as he comes of age. Sparrowhawk is a child in a village with an aptitude for magic, he eventually heads to a magic school. There he is goaded by another student into summoning the dead, an act that nearly kills him. He is left scarred and haunted by a shadow, which follows and threatens him wherever he goes. He eventually gives up on his assignment of being a village’s wizard to hunt it down. His friend from school, Vetch, joins him. They catch up to the shadow past the end of the world where Sparrowhawk merges with the shadow of his own death and emerges whole.

I feel as though there is something about the writing style, again, that I just don’t fully vibe with. Le Guin is classic fantasy and I just feel like I have a hard time following a lot of those works. Something about the way they drop important details very casually, I tend to miss them. This is a very easy read, I tore through it, but I felt like there was some barrier where I couldn’t fully connect to it.

Part of it might be that the main character and all of the influential figures are men. There’s one powerful woman who tricks Sparrowhawk twice but that’s kinda it for women. I just feel like I want a little more from my fantasy now. Having said that, in the afterword Le Guin talks about how all of the characters are people of color, something I sort of picked up on as Vetch is explicitly Black. And that’s really cool for fantasy, so frequently people of color are the savages or villains or something. So, I might overlook the lack of lady wizards.

The afterword of the book is also really interesting as it puts the book into the context of fantasy in the 60s. Back then fantasy was considered something for young kids, and with this book Le Guin wanted something that’d appeal to older folks. Teens potentially, but just something anyone could read. She also talks about how wars don’t interest her, she doesn’t want the militarism of the large fantasy works at the time. This is really a coming of age for Sparrowhawk. And I really vibe with that and I like that the scope is small, it really only has to do with one man’s journey back to himself. I just think that’s so much more powerful than large wars across worlds.

Anyways, I don’t know if I’ll continue with the series. It was short enough to read so I would not say no but I might not go out of my way to keep bashing my head against this series.

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

This Is Beautiful: Hysterectomy

 I've been trying to get this surgery for literal years, and I went through like 3 different consultations for it, and third time's the charm because I finally got her done! No more uterus for me! It wasn't the greatest recovery-wise, but now that it's been a few days I finally feel back to somewhat normal. And it's just a mark of how bad grad school is that I'd rather be recovering than working. So hooray for bodily autonomy!

Friday, June 5, 2026

“Brown Girl in the Ring” by Nalo Hopkinson

This was a really fun read, it’s part of this string of older fantasy books I have been checking out recently and I really enjoyed it. The book still feels so contemporary and relevant, with a really vibrant magic system and colorful characters. It manages to feel light while dealing with a lot of heavy themes.

The book opens with a mob boss, Rudy, getting a visit from a politician and being told that he needs to find a heart donor for a political candidate who is using this to up her image. From there it transitions to the new mother Ti-Jeanne who is providing for her baby (called “Baby”) and avoiding the baby’s father, Tony. He is still in the mob despite wanting to get out and she doesn’t trust him to make good on his promises anymore. Tony is asked to get this donor by any means necessary and he goes to Ti-Jeanne and her grandmother, Mami a local healer, for help. Mami uses her way with Caribbean spirits to hide the two of them while Tony makes a run for it, and in the process Ti-Jeanne’s powers as a seer are awakened. She attacks some of the mob guys and Tony is told to get the donor (who is likely to be Mami) and kill Ti-Jeanne or he will be killed by Rudy.

Tony heads back and is followed by a local unhoused woman who is revealed to be Ti-Jeanne’s mother. She tries to warn them, but Tony kills Mami and they take her away. Ti-Jeanne’s mother then comes to her senses and is revealed to be a spirit that Rudy has chained to himself for power. Tony then shoots her in the aftermath and now Ti-Jeanne, Tony, and Baby are on the run from Rudy. They team up with a gang of street kids, and Ti-Jeanne decides to confront Rudy (who is revealed to be her grandfather). She gets there and Rudy tries to chain her into being his next spirit but instead she calls on the Caribbean spirits and ghosts to take him down. Rudy is crushed, the book ends with the funeral for Mami.

Part of the reason the book feels so prescient is that the whole body snatchers thing of forcing people to become body donors has never gone away for the Black community. There’s still that nasty stuff going on, especially with stories of Black women having to give birth after dying etc. Which is tragic. But means that there is a relevancy to that aspect of the story.

I also really liked the magic system. Each of the seers has a sort of patron spirit, and for Ti-Jeanne that’s the Prince of Cemetery who is often portrayed as a sort of trickster god. He’s a lot of fun to observe and her visions drop hints about how to defeat Rudy later on. It is delightful to see other religious systems get highlighted and explained in a book like this.

The summary almost doesn’t do justice to the book, nearly every link is resolved by the end. Ti-Jeanne’s mother is ok and they talk about the family and all of their dynamics, and Tony does try to make amends but isn’t necessarily back together with Ti-Jeanne. I thought this was delightful, I really wish there was a sequel but I haven’t found anything yet.

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

This Is Beautiful: Sheep Detectives

 Oh it has been such a good year for movies that appeal to specifically me. "The Sheep Detectives" was such a fun time! It was heartwarming and funny and really well done. I thought the sheep animations would get old very quickly, but they were nice! The sheep also had distinct personalities and while I thought I would mix them all up I didn't. There is a sheep main character where I expected more of an ensemble, but I guess they had to do that. My only complaint is that I thought there was going to be a sheep romance which would have pissed me off, but in the end they didn't take that route so I guess this is actually a good thing about the movie, haha. 

Saturday, May 30, 2026

“Sex Isn’t Real” by Beans Velocci

I was fortunate enough to see Dr. Velocci give a talk on this work and a few chapters from it, and I knew I had to get the full thing afterwards. This is a really interesting overview of some history of sex science from a trans scholar thinking about what sex means over history and the modern day. Explicitly, they come down on the side that sex actually does not mean a whole lot, and the ending comes back to what this looks like today with new anti-trans legislation and executive orders and whatever else is happening.

The chapters each go through different realms of science, in roughly chronological order. The first is looking at animal sex studies, where apparently hyenas are difficult to sex and some birds can change their sex. The point here being that it is not a given that animals have distinct sexes that correspond to human biology and that there were even experiments getting chickens to change their sex entirely. From there we move down the street to the eugenics office where they were pioneering Big Data and all that stuff we love today about studies. Additionally the eugenics office wanted to know what the impacts of sterilization were, and research into this revealed that castration could cause individuals to become more feminine or masculine, but not enough to merit recategorization. Similarly in gynecology there emerged this idea that sex is a spectrum and that you can be more or less masculine/feminine, but again not enough to actually change category. This all gets cemented with the Kinsey studies as they needed to hold sex as a firm binary to demonstrate that humans are all a little bit gay and have a range of experiences with same-sex individuals. All of this despite the fact that their dive into physiological differences between men and women amounted to nothing. And finally it ends with the rise of trans medicine and the medical gatekeeping around these treatments.

I thought this was a fascinating and really timely look into this sex science over time. As a scientist, I maintain the belief that science is responsible for quite a bit of transphobic and queer gatekeeping that exists. And this really points the finger at it where scientists are maintaining these rigid boundaries around biological sex, even when their own evidence states that they are wrong. We know sex is a spectrum, we know that it can change, and yet we don’t treat it accordingly. Most scientific studies don’t dig into this very deep, they go with whatever is on the paperwork and toss anyone who is trans, intersex, or otherwise.

My rants aside, I also thought this was a great and easy read because Velocci makes it entertaining. There’s footnotes that are snarky and connections between chapters are highlighted throughout. There are many times complicated scientific ideas are broken down easily and simply as well. You do not have to be a scholar of science, the history of science, or of STS (science, technology, and society) to understand this work. It makes me hopeful that other interested trans readers will be able to find this and get something out of it.

Now of course there is the question of where to go from here. There is the obvious idea that science needs to change its framework to include sex beyond the binary and stop simplifying it into two immutable options or anomalies. But the work also makes a great case for the idea that sex cannot only be the realm of science, humanities scholars have interesting ideas here as well. For a very long time humanities have meant talking about gender while science is the realm of the body and biology but that does not need to be the case. Scholars like Velocci clearly have important things to say about this history and science that should be taken seriously.

I know for me, what I’ll be taking out of this is that sex is not only the biology but also includes how we present, gender roles, etc. Time and time again scientists in this work would ignore the evidence of someone’s body in favor of keeping them within the category that aligns with their social role. This was evident in the eugenic and gynecological chapters, but also the gatekeeping of trans medicine for only those that wouldn’t regret it. I think that’s a really interesting idea to think about, that science of biological sex has always been inclusive of what we might call gender. And that’s science baby! Specifically I’m thinking of those studies that base sex off of purely genetics or genitals, etc. Adding more biological variables might not be the answer, it also might just be asking what someone wants to be categorized as. And wouldn’t that be interesting?

Anyways this book gave me so much to think about and chew on. I am hopefully exiting a field where I’ll be able to do hard science research and implement this directly, but I want to keep learning about it and studying more how people think about ideas like sex. Which will likely make me happier, and also be more interesting and aligned with the ideas presented here.

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

This Is Beautiful: Exploring New Places

 One of the highlights of the past week has just been checking out the new city I'll likely be at and looking through what's in the area. It's a real city! With multiple options for things to do! And they're all relatively close to each other! It's probably my favorite part of moving (the rest kinda sucks tbh), just thinking about the possibilities in a new place. I'm having a lot of fun just doing that instead of packing.