Techsploitation
By Annalee Newitz
Pipette
bitch blues
ON BAD DAYS Toby said he worked as a "pipette bitch."
For various reasons he preferred not to think about, he'd dropped out
of an experimental graduate program in computational biology at a prestigious
northern California university. With no interests other than computers,
a few select hormones, and science fiction novels, Toby was perfectly
poised to work as a low-level researcher in yet another lab where the
muckety-mucks studied genetic tagging. And so that's where he
found himself most days, holding his trusty pipette over a box of clear
gel attached to some electrodes.
Sometimes he would obsess over whether his hand was trembling too much
to squirt the pipette's contents into the precise, tiny cleft he'd opened
in the gel. Or he'd become intensely worried that he'd let the gel run
too long. But usually he thought about nothing at all. He didn't achieve
a Zen-like state of pipette-mediated calm. There was no enlightenment.
He simply immersed his entire consciousness in the tiny movements of
his body, the precise measurements and procedures.
During breaks Toby would peel off his latex gloves and head for a hidden
spot between the pebbly outer walls of the lab and a giant shrub. Once
comfortably invisible, he would light a joint and stare at his fingers:
slightly dusty, slightly pruny from sweat, and perfumed with a sharp
rubber smell. Pot was the perfect drug for a pipette bitch, he mused.
It kept you focused and calm; it stilled the caffeine-trembles in your
hands.
After almost a year of unbroken routine pipette, pot, pipette,
pot Toby realized he could spend an entire 24-hour period without
ever having a single, extended thought. Of course he was directing his
own actions, and phrases like "It's time to eat now" or "I
really should take a piss" would drift across his mind. But he
didn't have the kinds of multilayered or complex ideas he used to have
back when he was hacking hormone pathways in graduate school.
The situation would have been sad if it hadn't been so funny. Here
he was, a hypereducated twentysomething, his whole life before him,
and his supposedly professional middle-class job had turned his brain
into nothing more than basal ganglia.
So Toby decided to use his neocortex. He started reading newspapers
again. Instead of using his breaks to take a hit off whatever half-finished
joint he could find in his wallet, he would surf the Net on his laptop.
The most absurd thing he discovered aside from a social-networking
tool called Orkut was that according to all the usual news sources,
his job was hot. Supposedly Toby was at the center of an economic
revolution in biotech. The most-wanted jobs of the new millennium were
in genomics; cities like San Francisco were developing vast office parks
full of wet lab-ready spaces and special cold rooms for all the code-crunching
clusters.
Journalists who had once written clueless stories about sticky Web
sites during the dot-com boom were penning enthusiastic odes to proteomics
and bioinformatics. Apparently, a cure for cancer was around the corner.
Also, limb regeneration would be easy in a few years, just like gene
therapy for liver disease. Toby started to long for the days when he
stood, utterly stoned, with his pipette in his hand and nothing in his
brain. He started to get angry. How could these morons say working in
biotech was so terrific when it had turned him into a fucking zombie?
And what kind of scientists would tell journalists they were on the
cusp of regenerating the brains of Alzheimer's patients?
It made Toby feel like he worked at McDonald's: the plastic gloves
were practically the same. But more important, there was an almost
unbridgeable gulf between what he actually did for a living and
the hype about it. Reading the papers was like looking at one of those
glossy ads suggesting that women kicked off welfare would have great
futures if they just took jobs at fast-food restaurants. Look at our
shiny kitchens! Full of happy people in hair nets and gloves making
toasty burgers and crispy fries! Fast food is at the center of the restaurant
economy! Just like biotech.
Gritting his teeth in an agony of cynicism, Toby lost control. His
pipette pierced the gel, releasing a tiny squirt of DNA spooge into
the wrong spot. He'd have to pour another gel. Sighing, he realized
he couldn't cook another fucking french fry.
It was time for another job.
Annalee Newitz (cynic@techsploitation.com)
is a surly media nerd who says fuck the lab. Her column also appears
in Metro, Silicon Valley's weekly newspaper.