I'm kind of losing my shit right now. Doctor shot and in critical condition.
Natter 66: Get Your Kicks.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, pandas, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
My only explanation is that they bugged our living room.
All college alumni associations "work for the state department". Seriously.
Doctor shot and in critical condition.
Yikes!
Shit, Lisa.
So I'm kinda fucked for this Saturday. I can't work out what to do.
Grammar/copyediting hivemind assistance requested:
Letter from big boss starts out thus:
I am pleased and committed to continuing as scientific advisor to Dr. Name during her Research Development Award.
Grammatically it should be "pleased to continue" and "committed to continuing," but that would make for one very long and clunky sentence. I've been rewriting it in my head multiple ways and have yet to hit on something concise and elegant; my brain is clearly stuck and needs a jump-start from someone else's brain. The best I've come up with is
I am pleased to commit to continuing as scientific advisor...
which feels okay but not great. Help, please?
(And the more I look at it, the more puzzling it gets; I know it's "pleased to continue" and "committed to continuing," but I don't know why.)
And, shit, lisah, you posted while I was writing. All possible vibes going to everyone there, and to all the locals like you who are not there but are waiting and worrying.
Yikes, lisah. What the hell happened?
ita, is it too late to claim a previous thing for Saturday? Like a baby shower or something?
JZ, how about:
I'm pleased to announce that I have committed to continuing ...
I am pleased and committed to continuing as scientific advisor to Dr. Name during her Research Development Award.
I am pleased to be scientific adviser to Dr. Name and am committed to continue that relationship during her Research Development Award. (?)
I am pleased to commit to continuing as scientific advisor...
which feels okay but not great. Help, please?
I don't think that says the same thing. I think that they are using committed in the sense of being dedicated, not in the sense of agreeing to.
It's a formal letter of support for a grant continuation, so he is committing in the sense of agreeing to--stating that he absolutely will continue in this role if the grant is renewed (as far as I can tell from past letters, "I am pleased" is polite-speak for "This will help my patients and also generate a few more publications for my CV so I'm for it").