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Holidazed and confused

Holidazed and confused

A guide to MIT’s institutional resources

June 23, 2020 | Anonymous Auth.

It’s December. Holiday music peals through the air, and the hallways are decked in reds, greens, golds and silvers. The anticipation for the end of the year hangs in the air, breathing down the napes of necks and nipping at the ankles of passersby. For many adults, December means the holidays and family and endless […]

Ask and you shall receive

Ask and you shall receive

How grad school put me on a healthier path

June 23, 2020 | Tatiana N.

It was my first semester of grad school, and I was curled up in a ball on my dorm room bed. I was experiencing a distinct mixture of flu-like symptoms and crushing dread. It felt like the world was ending, even though from a rational place I knew that it definitely wasn’t. From my bed, […]

Mental Health Matters: Issue #2

Mental Health Matters: Issue #2

Prioritizing your mental well being in difficult times

June 23, 2020 | Grad Blog Editorial Board

This week we are publishing a second issue on mental health, with our first issue released in February 2020. In these difficult times for all of us, we believe that it’s especially important to know that it is okay to reach out for help and support – whether to a trusted family member, good friend, […]

You mean, it’s not unhealthy?

You mean, it’s not unhealthy?

Recovering from an eating disorder at MIT, and how we can make our Institute a healthier place

June 22, 2020 | Matthew A.

TRIGGER WARNING: eating disorders The road to kale is paved with good intentions Many students select their college majors because of inspiring teachers, envisioned careers, or particular interests. I was motivated to study Biochemistry for another, somewhat unusual reason: an eating disorder I’d developed at age sixteen. That year, I watched “Sugar: The Bitter Truth,” […]

Piruksraurugut!

Piruksraurugut!

We have to do it!

June 8, 2020 | Annauk O.

For thousands of years, Inuit women celebrated womanhood and rites of passage by giving and receiving traditional markings. Two years ago, I received my tavluġun (chin tattoo) through a traditional Inuit hand poke method, where a needle is dipped into ink and then poked into the skin. Part of the meaning behind the two thinnest […]