or Dinner With Biologists
We sat down to dinner.
Thanked God for the food. Then
Younger Daughter said excitedly:
YD: Did I tell you guys about my eyeball
dissection?!
Husband (equally excited): Tell me
about it! I have to give a lecture on
the eye tomorrow! I was going to buy eyeballs, but I didn’t get around to
ordering them.
YD: The
surprising thing was that the cornea is milky and blue! First, they gave us safety scissors. We had to cut off the sclera and the fat and
muscle surrounding the eye. It was
almost impossible to do with safety scissors!
Me: I can tell this is going to be a really
appropriate topic for dinner conversation.
Husband: Why did you have to cut the muscle off?
YD: We had to get
into the back guts of the eyeball.
Me: (I put
down my fork.)
Husband: It seems to me you could have just made an
incision instead.
YD: It’s kind of tough material to make an
incision through. And… safety scissors.
Husband: Does the eyeball collapse when you cut the
incision?
Me: (I
blanch.)
YD: The aqueous
humor gushed out! After we got all the aqueous humor out we
were supposed to cut the eyeball in half, but once again, safety scissors
didn’t work.
Me: (I give
up all hope of enjoying my dinner.)
Husband: You need a scalpel for that!
YD: I know,
right? We were also able to dig around
in the cornea and yank out the iris.
Me: (I try
to decide to stick it out, but I can’t eat.)
YD: A really cool thing happens when you do
remove the aqueous humor. You can see
the tapetum.
Husband: Did you talk about the pigmented epithelial
layer?
YD: No, but we saw the (something anatomical).
Husband: Did you see the optic disk?
YD: Was that the
white thing hanging off the eyeball?
Me: (I lose
my appetite completely.)
Husband: No. (He gives a description of the optic disk.) I was going to get some eyeballs, but I won’t
have time to dissect one in class. I
have to explain the whole thing in 50 minutes.
YD: That should take about ten minutes.
Husband: But I have to explain how the eye works and how the information is transmitted
in the brain.
(Husband proceeds to
give his lecture about how the left visual field projects onto the right side
of the retina. This includes use of the
words “optic chiasm.”)
Husband (in full professorial mode): Do you know how the receptors transform the
inputs into signals? (He explains, using the words opsins and
retinal. Then proceeds to talk about the pupillary light reflex,
Edinger-Westphal nucleus, ciliary ganglion, acetylcholine, and muscarinic
receptors.)
Husband: … the lens gets fat when objects are close,
and then adjusts to thin whenever the object being focused on is far away.
Me (finally something I can understand): Then why can’t my eyes focus up close any
more?!
Husband: Because, when you get old the lens gets all
crusty and can’t focus as easily.
Me: I knew
I should have done a better job at cleaning.
Husband: I have to explain ALL THIS tomorrow.
YD: (asks
about other biological stuff)
Husband: (explains, using the words pyramidal motor
system, extrapyramidal motor system, ATP, glucose, sphincter. YD is appreciative.)
Husband: Perhaps tomorrow we can talk about the
vestibular system! Isn’t biology fun?!
YD: Yeah!
Yes, the conversation did include that many exclamation
points. Biologists can be very
enthusiastic people.
And a dear reader asked recently if I actually write my family's conversations down. Why, yes, I do. More on that after I get the ChristmaHannuKwanzaa gifts bought and wrapped, cookies baked, cards sent, desk cleaned, menorah located, and stockings located.
3 comments:
Brilliant! I love scientifically-minded people - they're so entertaining.
Good luck with the wrapping etc etc. I have a shopping day planned for tomorrow - I'm exhausted just thinking about it...
I'm with you on trying to stick it out but losing my appetite. I'm glad my 17yo is focused on DNA extraction and extrapolation these days. My husband, on the other hand, likes to talk about evolving his Pokemon.
I'm just so impressed at the vast vocabulary. But I would've lost my appetite, too.
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