So today Google had this drawing of Marie Curie on their homepage.
One of my aunts told me about her. I think it was in a conversation about the Nobel Prize. I had said something about the Nobel prize of medicine. Anyway I read up on Marie Curie. She didn't become a fixation, but I still thought she was cool. Other scientists I thought were cool were Stephen Hawking, Ben Carson ( neurosurgeon at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine), and yes Bill Nye the Science Guy.
Throughout my childhood Helen Keller was still the main famous intellectual I looked up to.
With my current fixation still being Dr. Grandin, I realized a trend as I looked back: most of my childhood heroes were not celebrites or athletes. Rather they were nerds of greatness. I guess that makes sense for a girl who slept with science books under her pillow for a while.
Having nerdy role-models made me feel better about my intense interest in science and medicine related topics. When I got teased at school my list of nerds of greatness made me feel less alone.
One of my aunts told me about her. I think it was in a conversation about the Nobel Prize. I had said something about the Nobel prize of medicine. Anyway I read up on Marie Curie. She didn't become a fixation, but I still thought she was cool. Other scientists I thought were cool were Stephen Hawking, Ben Carson ( neurosurgeon at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine), and yes Bill Nye the Science Guy.
Throughout my childhood Helen Keller was still the main famous intellectual I looked up to.
With my current fixation still being Dr. Grandin, I realized a trend as I looked back: most of my childhood heroes were not celebrites or athletes. Rather they were nerds of greatness. I guess that makes sense for a girl who slept with science books under her pillow for a while.
Having nerdy role-models made me feel better about my intense interest in science and medicine related topics. When I got teased at school my list of nerds of greatness made me feel less alone.
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