Because it's the best thing I could imagine for myself
and it is what I´ve always wanted to do.
This was actually my dream
for a long time, because already in
biology classes I realized that there
are so many questions that we don't
understand yet, things like aging that
concerns us, but we have no idea how it works.
And I think this, I wanted to
contribute to change and really try to
answer questions that are so important
for us humans but yet are unanswered.
I think it was more like a set of
exclusion criteria of what I do not want
to be and that left me very much with
being interested in a job where I can
fulfill my curiosity. I´m a very curious
person and I think it's a huge privilege
that society pays people like us to
basically fulfill their curiosity and I
think science is one way to do that.
Maybe I was compared to my
friend in school, when we went to the
forest or something, I always was
looking at bugs etc.
I always had that curiosity for biology in general.
I think it most had to do with my curiosity,
I was always fascinated by how our brain
works, how nerve cells connect each other,
how can they really drive how we think,
how to command movements, how to interact
with other people, how to bring this to
more emotional level, how we are,
how we behave as individual persons.
When I was small I would bring things
to home and my mother got
crazy one time when I brought a bunch of
frog eggs and I kept them for days and
days in our bathroom and she tried to
clean the top of the shelfs and
everything spills on her, including
this little frogs that just got out.
So I always wanted to be a researcher.
I haven't planned "I have to be a professor",
but I really wanted to be a researcher.
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