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greyscale
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« on: June 09, 2010, 06:19:39 PM » |
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My partner, "Al", will be moving to Well-Endowed Research Institute (WERI) in the fall to start his own lab. I'm a postdoc, a few years behind Al and in the same field, and I'm staying here for now. I have a very competitive external fellowship and a strong publication record. This year has sucked, though. My advisor is patient, but I doubt I've impressed him so far.
I can imagine a few solutions to our two-body situation within the next few years, but one of them might require some action soon:
WERI also has fellow-type positions that provide a chance to run a small lab of your own for a few years. I should have applied before Al accepted the offer; he could have brought it up while negotiating. But I didn't, because my year has been rough and I don't have a research plan all set to go. I can't propose working on my current project there, at least not yet. I am here to learn some experimental techniques. If I do apply, it would either be for a different project using my existing skills, or this project but after I've learned more (and impressed my advisor...).
Al and I are visiting WERI soon. It's probably the first the director has known of my existence (just as Al's partner, not as a scientist), and he assumed that I'm moving there at the same time as Al. I can fix that misunderstanding easily. But should we bring up the possibility of me applying for a position when we visit? Or should I wait a few months til I figure out details of what I want to work on, and see if it makes sense then?
I'm sure I'm overthinking this. It's just that in a few weeks, I'll be sitting at a dinner table with these people, and I'm sure they're going to ask what I do, if I'm moving there, etc. I don't want to sit there tongue-tied wondering what I should say.
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