Wednesday, January 05, 2011

A "wake-up call"

Yesterday I went to an interview in Manchester.

I went with a bit of fear of the unknown. The project is to work in the subject of Breast Cancer, Sponsored in part by the Breakthrough

In preparation for the interview I have looked for the meet the team section in the Breakthrough Charity website because the job offer document did not mention who was the PI.

I have also asked the secretary who was going to interview me: Anthony Howell, Michael Lisanti, Rob Clarke and Goran Landberg. 
I have made my background check on all of them and read a couple of papers from each. And I was scared. I was scared because all of them are well reputed scientist with a track record that some of us (scientist) can only dream of.
I had to make a presentation about my work, I decided to take the talk I gave last year at the BSG (no not the Battle Star Galactica meeting). I though I was going to be under pressure, as my work is only a drop compared to the ocean of papers my interviewers have. Plus the fact that I come from intestinal tissue and only briefly related to cancer. 

Well I was pleasantly surprised that every thing went smooth. All the questions, the answers. I discovered that the "boss" would be Michael Lisanti, and at some point he even said that with my background I would be the ideal person. You always distrust such remarks, there is no way to tell if this is just to make you fell good or if it is a real assessment. The ideal candidate remark should be because I have a background in oxidative stress, I know epithelial tissue biology, epithelial stem cell, stem cell niches, I know about cancer stem cells, I know about stromal interactions, I have experience with different animal models (*disclaimer* I condone any kind of animal cruelty. Laboratory animals live in normal circumstances a happy life) and I am eager to prove myself.

Anyway I left after a brief talk about the state of science in my country, big institues that are being created now (like the Champalimaud foundation Centre for the Unknown) and the almost mandatory subject of public finances. Well they said that they would call me by the end of the week (liars!).

So I got the call this morning. it was a wake up call (9:06 - my new lucky number) and on the other end was a job offer. An offer that I gladly accepted :)

6 comments:

Ana said...

Ah, assim sim, está a historieta toda!!

PARABÉEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEENS!!! ÉS o maior! :) ganda Ganda! :D


era mais ou menos assim q me sentia qd fui defender a minha tese ahahahahaha!! assustadíssima perante o background do juri... e depois correu tudo lindamente :)

PARABÉNS HOME!!!!! :))))

Anonymous said...

Parabéns :)
Qd começas?

Só um à parte: que disseste tu ao comité inquisidor :) sobre a fundação Champalimaud e o centro de investigação?

ganda said...

sobre o champalimão disse que queria ser como ele e deixar assim umas centenas de milhões para criar institutos com edificios mto giros...

RedFox said...

fixe.

fixe?!?!?

FOD4CE PÁ! BRUTAL C4R4LHO!!

7 ANOS DEPOIS!!!

http://u-ganda.blogspot.com/2004/09/procura-se-empregotrabalhoqqcoisaqdgui.html

Deus é GRAN-DE DE-US É GRAN- DE!!!

Patife said...

Isso ainda foi melhor que o meu wake up call. ;)

Anonymous said...

Olá:)

MUITOS PARABÉNS!

Já te escrevi ontem no Gmail. Hoje li o post. O lab em que trabalhas é mesmo no Paterson Institute? Em que edificio? Em que andar?
O grupo em que trabalhas é mesmo expcepcional (estive a ler os perfis que escreveste)!!

Até hoje, de todos os sitios em que estive, Manchester é o primeiro da minha lista: além de ser expcional, tem a humanidade e a "amabilidade" que poucos sitios tem.

MUITOS PARABÉNS!

BOA SORTE!

jks

Rita