December 28, 2020

Life: Winter break. Bye, Bye, 2020.

 Winter break is the time to look back this year and plan for the next year.

2020 was a highly unusual year. Due to Coronavirus, our university was closed for 2.5 months (March-May). Although it did flatten the curve, Coronavirus lingered during the Summer. As winter came, COVID19 again started marching on. Vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna recently became available to frontline healthcare workers, nursing home residents, caretakers, and first responders.

Remote work is encouraged, and mask and social distancing are enforced in the campus. 

That is where we are now.


I never had an official diagnosis for COVID19. But I had suspicious and persistent chest cold during quarantine, also had one day in Summer I felt sick with headache and stomachache, both of which are quite rare for me. I suspect they might have been a mild form of COVID19, and if so, I'd probably be okay and would live through this pandemic. 

I'll still be cautious. Report said a few days ago that a Japanese politician, age 53, died of COVID19 after 2 days of feeling ill. He was on his way to get PCR test for COVID19 diagnosis when he collapsed. They are still investigating exact cause of his death (pneumonia? Pulmonary embolism and stroke? Coronavirus can affect endothelial cells and blood coagulation.) Stories like this should make people act carefully. 

Or, perhaps, more famous people need to die or something for the virus to be taken seriously? Some COVID19 deniers' responses are truly dumbfounding.

I'll wear mask, wash hands, keep social distance anyhow, and will take the vaccine when it  become available some time next year. 


I am one of the fortunate people who did not get seriously sick in 2020. I am also one of the fortunate who got to keep his job thus with minimal financial impact. In 2020, I wrote 4 grants and participated in another. I published one original research, one review, and had one perspective manuscript accepted. Since lab work is slowed down, I initiated a collaboration project with a bioinformatics expert. We found something interesting and a manuscript is about to be sent out. I'll see if we can get by with this type of projects with minimal lab work for a time being.


Many things in life is beyond my control. I can still choose what to focus on my thinking and efforts. Need to think to get it going strong in 2021 and beyond.









December 17, 2020

Dance: Online Tango events, and upcoming "2nd Holiday Tango weekend (12/19/2020)"

 Tango is an antithesis of social distancing.

After March 2020 to present, all milongas around me are shut down. "Forget it", until vaccine is ready and pandemic is contained.


Indeed, Operation Warp Speed did an incredible job, developed 95% effective mRNA vaccines. Beginning 2 days ago (12/15), frontline healthcare workers are getting the vaccine in this state. Previously I predicted that my turn would probably be March or April. I'd just wait, while attempting to stay healthy.

 That would mean, it will still be some time until we can safely return to milonga. 


In the meantime, people are attempting something new.

One of the attempts is online Tango shows.

I checked out Dallas student show on 12/5. It was interesting. It was a mix of pre-recorded introductions and (mostly) live performances. With introductions, it was far more informative than regular stage shows. The performers were wearing black masks with some bling. Very 2020.

In the future, when they reenact 2020, they would use masks of all kind. Personally I've only used blue surgical masks and have not gotten fancy ones with bling. Maybe I should get one?




In the online show format, actually, we cannot tell if a performance is live or not. Will splicing and editing of dance performance become more popular? Perhaps.

Glenn Gould (1932-1982) was a classical piano genius, particularly famous for his J.S. Bach interpretations. He advocated editing of musical recordings over live performances, and it was met with skepticism and resistance. But it was 55 years ago and he was ahead of his time. Now, editing is a common practice in almost anything.

We scientists are strictly forbidden from arbitrarily editing data, and data manipulations are scrutinized, as such manipulations can easily skew the results, interpretation, and message. But we are bound by mother nature, which is an exception among many fields of human arts. In a creative arts catering to human bodies and minds, scientific rigor is not required, or is even a hindrance.

That said, how about dancing? Can we edit and create a "perfect" dance on film? Sounds like it is also a common practice, Is it not?


In the world of edited films, we can ground ourselves with live performances.

Online Tango shows are a format between live and edit. You can control how much percent is live, and how much is pre-recorded. There would be a Goldilocks zone in the mix somewhere for entertainment of viewing pleasure.
 

There is an upcoming professional Tango show on line (zoom) this Saturday (12/19/20). I've got a ticket ($20 via paypal) and am looking forward to it.

 



link to the facebook event page, "2nd Holiday Tango weekend"


"We present a spectacular New Show: from Buenos Aires "Amores Tangos", the Argentine Tango couple Patricio & Eva, Celina & Hugo, Dallas Tango Femme Team, also the singers Limon Garcia & Cucuza Castiello and more…"