Technically I'm a marine biologist.... When I forget that, I look at the following...
A photo that was going around facebook....
by Scott C. Reynolds (A Timothy McSweeney column).
In the fifth grade your teacher showed your class a Jacques Cousteau
film and that pretty girl that sat in front of you told you that she
wanted to be a marine biologist. You didn’t really know why at the time,
but the natural response seemed to be taking up her cause as your own.
In high school she got popular and you, not so much. You had become a
man of science and decided that you, hailing from a landlocked city,
were going to spend your life frolicking with sharks, teaching dolphins
sign language, and studying the secret mating dances of the Atlantic
lobster.
Many people went through the marine biology phase. Most of them moved
on. Not you though. You saw your dreams through to the bitter end.
You started college and attacked your undergraduate degree in biology
with fervor. Probably about the time you got to Organic Chemistry you
started questioning your choices, but you powered through with more than
a little help from that homely chemistry major you suddenly took an
interest in and then let down not so gently when the semester was over.
Now you were four years in and committed to the graduate school path,
because you knew that without a doctoral degree your career in marine
biology would end at one or more of the following (in relatively
descending order of acceptability):
• Adjunct professor of biology at Central Florida Community College.
• Junior marketing associate at a drug company.
• Middle manager in charge of going to meetings at the same drug company.
• High school science teacher.
• Yacht salesman.
• Yacht cleaner.
• Pool cleaner.
• Peanut vendor at Miami Dolphins games.
None of this aligned with your goals so you went on to get your
doctoral degree. Having spent the better part of a decade lost in
academia, you were hopelessly out of touch with every aspect of the
actual human world and convinced yourself that your thesis,
“Heteronormative Behaviors in Sea Cucumber Colonies,” would have
significant global impact.
The lesson you failed to learn in all those years is that none of
your marine biology classes were without a professor. In fact, no marine
biology class anywhere is without a professor and a line of seventeen
aging post-doctoral layabouts waiting for a tenured old codger to
finally die and vacate a university teaching seat.
Upon further study you discover that the jobs for marine biology PhDs are (in relatively descending order of acceptability):
• Government-funded researcher with directives to make the science match the administration’s current stance on global warming.
• Corporate-funded researcher concerned with practical applications of
exploiting the marine habitats that you have dedicated nearly half of
your life to.
• Sea World killer whale artificial inseminator.
• Swim-with-the-sharks tour guide and chum distributor.
• Pool cleaner at Sea World.
• Aquarium security guard who tells children not to tap on the glass.
• Head barnacle scraper down at the docks.
• Stock boy at Pier One Imports.
• Long John Silvers fry cook.
Pool cleaner at least moved up a couple of spots.
Having come to terms with the reality of being forced out of the
comfortable womb of academic life, you are born into a world where there
are precisely twelve research jobs in your field, and most of them are
being taken by people who had the foresight to study the oceans as an
ancillary means to a more lucrative end in biotechnology. Each one you
pursue and lose leads you further into depression.
It turns out that the girl you tried to impress back in fifth grade
gave up on her dream of marine biology and went to business school. One
day she was eating sushi with a school of the suits you swore you’d
never be like and the waiter told them that raw sea urchin is often used
in Japan as a male sexual enhancement supplement.
She got some investors together and started a company that makes
billions selling UniSecs, a natural aphrodisiac made from extracted sea
urchin pheromones. They needed a head of research and development to
lead them in their quest to patent the urchin genome. You were up for
the job, but you were a little too “sciencey” for the Board of
Directors, so they decided to go a different direction. Instead, they
promoted that marketing douchebag with the B.S. in biology. After they
went public, he bought a yacht.
Yacht salesmen, by the way, make a fortune in commissions.
You took a job at the famed Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute as a
janitor where you waited in vain for the scientists to discover that you
were a brilliant mind and offer you the job of your dreams.
Overwhelmed by mounting student loan debt you stole one of the manned
submersibles and took it as deep as it would go before you blew the
hatch and allowed sudden explosive decompression to lay you to rest on
the ocean floor, amidst a bed of sea cucumbers.