Sense Lab - Social Emotional NeuroScience Endocrinology

Fall Semester was a lab rotation with Dr Corbett at the SENSE Lab 
(Social Emotional NeuroScience Endocrinology) 

First day at the lab with my PI, Prof Blythe Corbett

My name on the office door!!
Imagine I get an office!!






with Sense Lab mates. 




https://senselab.vkcsites.org/



 

This time last year

This time last year. 8/25/21: First day of class in final year of undergrad at UC Berkeley

 




New Beginnings

Day 6 of Instagram takeover @pdsoros

New Beginnings

Image Description: background of flower and leaves. 
Headshot photo of young man with black hair, black eyes and brown skin. 

 
New Beginnings and next steps:
Grad School at Vanderbilt + PD Soros Fellowship.
Image Description; Red Brick Building with signage which reads "Vanderbilt University" 
Small figure standing in front of the sign. 


A proud & beaming Srinivasan thatha (grandpa) in new college swag. Wish my other late thatha was around to see this new beginning too!!

A young man of South Asian origin standing next to his older grandfather. 



Fellow neuroscience grad students at Vandy.
Image Descriptions; A group of students looking at the camera. 



Graduate TA training this week
A lot to think over.
TA-ship will definitely look different for me.

Screenshot that says: TAO welcome to Center for Teaching's Teaching Assistant Orientation





A personalized embroidered PhD Lab Coat

awaits me and a Neuroscience Retreat




I get to add more pebbles that help widen ripples in the Pond of Change as

Fellow, Frist Center for Autism & Innovation at Vanderbilt

To kick off, I will be taking Prof Keivan Stassun’s NISE (Neurodiversity inspired Science & Engineering) course this fall.





My summer comes to an end.
Classes at Vandy start next week!!














 

Pebbles in the Pond of Change

 https://instagram.com/pdsoros

In case you don't have instagram


Day 5 of instagram takeover @pdsoros

Pebbles in the Pond of Change: Reflections on Advocacy

Image Description: Photo of a young man with brown skin, black hair or South Asian origin. 
Background shows small falling pebbles creating ripples in the water below. 



I did attempt to march in a Climate Change protest on campus.

But not everyone can march in protests (sensory overload/ social anxiety) or be a powerful orator (communication challenges). When you are disabled, you may have to reimagine what advocacy looks like for you. There are many many ways to contribute.

Image Description: A large group of college age students gathered and marching on grounds of a college campus, holding up banners. The banner in the foreground reads "We need climate action now!"


High School example. Editor, AccessBraille Magazine. 
This quarterly free magazine with articles written by disabled & nondisabled teens in the US, was printed in braille & accompanied braille teaching kits that volunteers carried to remote parts of Africa and Asia. In some parts of mountainous Nepal, volunteers traveled on donkeys. Later, it made its way to Bookshare and the Perkins School for the Blind. Audio versions were also available.

Image Description: A pink cover book with title "The Reading Finger"
Background image: a falling pebble, creating ripples in the water below


I think of everything I’ve gotten to do as small pebbles that widen ripples in the Pond of Change
Background Image: many small falling pebbles, creating ripples in the water below




During my Berkeley years, I got to contribute more such pebbles.

One pebble was getting to write over 50 articles including a weekly column on autism.

To my rather immense surprise, that time, people were finding what I was writing to be useful. I was getting emails from around the world.

Image Description: 1. Photo of a young man with brown skin, black hair or south asian origin with the words The Daily Californian on top and Hari Srinivasan underneath. 2. Photo of a folder newspaper with the words The Daily Californian and "History of Activism inspires Disability Advocacy" on it. 
Background Image:  falling pebbles, creating ripples in the water below




Student Instructor, Autism Class.  Another example of a pebble was creating and leading an autism class where the enrollment grew from 17 to 50. It was so impactful to hear from a student in Europe that what she had learned in class was influencing her grad school research.

Background Image: a falling pebble, creating ripples in the water below

 



Application of Education. More pebbles: Much of what I was learning in class also found applications in talks & articles. Fueled by Prof Matt Walker's class on Sleep - Autism: The Search for Restorative Sleep. Fueled by Prof Allison Harvey and Prof Steve Hinshaw's class: Standard of Care for Mental Health in Autism. 

Background Image: a falling pebble, creating ripples in the water below



Outside of college too, I get the opportunity to add more small pebbles through the numerous orgs and projects I’m involved in - IACC, ASAN, ASA, DREDF. 

Background Image: falling pebbles, creating ripples in the water below





The Point: Every small pebble on our part can help widen ripples in the pond of change.
Background Image:  falling pebbles, creating ripples in the water below



I will end with a quote from a person I am in deep admiration of, legendary disability civil rights activist, Judy Heumann, who I finally got to meet last month.

“Change never happens at the pace we think it should. It happens over years of people joining together, strategizing, sharing, and pulling all the levers they possibly can. Gradually, excruciatingly slowly, things start to happen, and then suddenly, seemingly out of the blue, something will tip.” - Judy Heumann

Image Description:



























ADA 32 in DC

Was a honor to be part of group invited to attend formal reception hosted by Vice President Kamala Harris at her residence, Naval Observatory, in DC, to celebrate ADA 32 and get to meet and interact with so many luminaries. 

What can I say. OMG.

Photo 1: Vice President Kamala Harris and Mr Emhoff.

Photo 2: Attorney General Merrick Garland

Photo 3: Senator Tom Harkin (who was chief sponsor of the Americans with Disabilities Act in 1990)

Photo 4: Got to meet my hero in-person, Judy Heumann, the legendary disability civil rights activist. In deepest admiration and awe of the grueling efforts of her generation that helped open the doors of inclusion and opportunity for the current generation of disabled folks like me.

Photo 5: Me just hanging out with the flags, quite wide-eyed at my surroundings and the people I was surrounded by and got to interact with. Was honestly quite stunned to receive a White House event invite.

(Image Descriptions: work in progress....)
















 


Top Five Living Disability Activist

Too humbling. Not sure if I am deserving of mention in same space as Judy Human and Alice Wong. 

Eric Garcia: Ask me for my "Top five ____."

Solomon: Disability activists, 4 living, 5 all time

Eric: All Time: Judith Heumann, Brad Lomas, Ed Roberts, Justin Dart, Pat Wright

Living: @SFDireWolf (Alice Wong), @JustStimming (Julia Bascom), @Cal_Montgomery, @HariSri108 (Hari Srinivasan)


Getting Real

Attended my first PhD Dissertation Defense session by a Vandy PhD Student on Enlarged Vascular Spaces. 

Its getting real...., classes start in 2 weeks!!! Excited and also terribly nervous. 



Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation

History of the Industrial Age - Trains, cars (including presidential cars), planes, tools, steam engines, farm equipment, art glass, furniture, clocks and more all under one roof.