Today is shaping up to be a good day.

It started when I woke up as: Last night, for the first time in over a week, I got nearly eight hours of sleep. True, that sleep was from 6:30pm yesterday until 2am this morning -- thus proving that I am most definitely not on Japan time yet -- but I was definitely in need of something approximating a full night's sleep.

It continued when I stepped outside. It has definitely been Summertime in Japan this week... which means that it has been relatively hot (temperature in the high 80s) and quite humid (humidity in the high 80s), with lots of clouds and some rain. Thank goodness for air conditioning! Going outside has felt like walking through a swamp! Today, however, it is bright and sunny with a clear blue sky! Lovely! Meanwhile, the temperature has cooled off just a touch (about 77oF) and the humidity level has dropped considerably (under 50%)... making it quite a joy to be outdoors!

On my way from the dormitory to the meeting this morning, I passed one of the cats that lives around KEK. There are several of them, and it is not uncommon to see them sprawled in patch of sunlight around the lab. I stopped for a bit to pet the kitty; this was a Good ThingTM, as I spent much of yesterday being very sad about the passing of a wonderful little grey tiger kitty.

In between waking up at 2am and heading in to the morning meeting, I revised my talk from Wednesday, making a little less technical (and less controversial) so that it can be shown to the full collaboration at the plenary meeting this afternoon. Still nervous about this... as it will be my first plenary talk on T2K, but I am mostly ready now.

Finally, there is one other piece of good news that arrived today. Mentioning it is rather self-centric[*], so I am placing it behind a cut:


Last month, out of curiosity, I signed up for a supervised Mensa IQ test. In actually, Mensa actually gives you two tests at the session: One is the Cattell III B test, which has language problems, logic problems, and maths problems on it. The other is the Cattell Culture Fair III A test, which was designed to test intelligence without language and without cultural and educational biases; the problems on this test are all pictorial. Scoring in the top 2% of the population on either test makes one eligible to join Mensa... though joining was not really my goal. Mainly, I was just curious; I wanted to see if I was clever.

The test results arrived in the mail today, and [livejournal.com profile] cheshcat passed them on to me when we chatted online this morning. Apparently, I am doubly qualified to join Mensa, as I scored in the top 2% of the population on both tests. Indeed, I obtained that percentile nirvana -- the highest possible bracket of 1%. Looks like there actually is a brain in my head after all!

Of course, now the British Mensa society is clamoring for me to join them. Indeed, they are offering a bribe of a flash drive, if I join within two weeks. I am not certain that I want to do this, though. As I said earlier, I took the test to see if I was clever, not to actually join an association of clever people. As an experimental particle and astroparticle physicist, I think I get a fair bit of exposure to some really smart folks on a regular basis already. On the other hand, I will be starting a search for a faculty position in the next year or two; I don't know if having Mensa membership on my CV (alongside Oxford, Imperial College, and Fermilab!) will help... but it certainly will not hurt! So I might join for a year to see what it is like, deciding at the end of the year if I want to continue.

I am lucky enough to have some pretty bright friends, and I know that there are Mensa members (or former members) on my LJ f-list. Would any of you care to speak up and let me know why you think that I should -- or should not -- join? What benefits do -- or did -- you get from being a Mensa member? Or was it just a waste of time and money? I am open to signing on if there is a concrete benefit... but not if it just means that I get to be a card-carrying Smart PersonTM. The idea of paying £45 a year just to prove that one has a high IQ doesn't sound terribly intelligent to me!


In any case, this was certainly welcome news and contributed to making this an excellent morning!

This afternoon, I will be presenting my talk and wrapping up the T2K meeting. This evening, we have the Stony Brook group dinner, with me and RT -- as former Stony Brookers -- included. So wish me luck this afternoon on my talk, dear friends! If that goes well, then today will be quite complete!


[*] On the other hand, if you can't be self-centric on occasion in your own journal, where can you be?

contrarywise: Glowing green trees along a road (brainy specs!)

From: [personal profile] contrarywise


Congrats! And good luck on your talk. It's like old times, eh?

From: [identity profile] anarchist-nomad.livejournal.com


Thank you!!

The talk went okay. Nothing controversial in it and no questions were asked when I was done. Afterward, several people (three) told me that I had given a good presentation, so I suppose it was fine.

And, yes indeed! Very much like old times! There's a 20 inch PMT on display here at KEK and I was cooing nostalgically over it yesterday. (Besides, those things are beautiful!)

Speaking of old times, you're up rather late, aren't you?
.

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