šTL;DR:Ā What do Celebrations, Kobe, Networks, Women, and Parasites have in common? Theyāre all in this newsletter!
Happy Monday folks! Itās been a couple of weeks since I last checked in. This past week has been particularly challenging with some interpersonal conflicts related to work. Luckily it hasnāt got me too down, thanks to some amazing friends out there and more surprisingly, a renewed self-confidence in my abilities.
Enough of that for now, this week is for celebrations. I was fortunate enough to share some precious moments with a few friends and loved ones. I believe that as you get older, you experience the feeling of ābeing proud of othersā more often than when you are younger and thinking more about yourself. Here are a couple of moments that hit me right in the feels:
Pictured: Dr. Star Wars passing his Applied Physics thesis defense in style, a beautiful Lauder baby and resilient parents, a Mckinsey firm job offer, a Yalie pediatric dentist, and arguably the most important - a double rainbow seen from my window.
š A Complicated Kobe & Human Nature
As you probably know by know, Kobe Bryant died yesterday in a tragic helicopter accident. This made me sad for a few reasons. Partially because this incredibly talented former athlete and his young daughter were killed. Moreso because I was alerted of this news immediately and from every medium (internet, friends, family, and from people that donāt even care about basketball).
I canāt remember the last time my phone was blowing up like this because of any news, much less the death of an athlete. To me, this was a gentle reminder of human nature and what people care about (this is why important global issues are so darn hard to solve). As an added kicker, Kobe has a pretty notorious/controversial past. I had forgotten that, and conveniently so did many writers who published the articles written yesterday.
Iām not trying to sully a dead manās legacy or be controversial. I just think we humans are strange creatures and care about strange things.
Hereās the front page of BBC World News which illustrates the point of what Iām trying to get across.
š The Understated Effect of Networks on Your Life
James Currier, a VC from the fund NFX, wrote an amazing piece on how important networks are in your life. Some networks are pre-determined, and others you opt into. Either way you look at it, they have an incredible and outsized effect on your life:
What family you're born into
High SchoolĀ network
CollegeĀ network
First job
Marriage / Choosing a life partner
Where you live
Reassessments
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š©āš« Why Women Leave STEM Fields (and other professions tooā¦)
Karen Morenz, a 25 y/o Physical Chemistry PhD candidate, wrote up a great data-driven Alternative Argument for Why Women Leave STEM. She argues that sexism isnāt the main reason (and while it still exists, weāve made great strides to close this gap). Rather, she proposes that itās the lack of support structures to enable proper family-planning.
š¦ Parasite
I finally managed to get around to watching the enthralling Korean comedy/tragedy/thriller Parasite. āFake it ātil you make itā is the name of the game.
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šWow - you made it to the bottom. I hope you enjoyed. Reach out with feedback or just to say hi!š
I love you,
Lobo
Ways I'd love to help you: bit.ly/pushpull-lobo