The Geography Glossary: A Beginner’s Guide to Biometeorology

You may not know this about me, dear reader, but I – a writer of monthly, very wordy blogs – love words! I adore, and admire words, am amused, and delighted by verbiage, and find myself consistently and often thinking, speaking and, even writing, in the form of words. Words are powerful tools, which contain concepts, connotations, and histories all in tiny, syllabic packages. Words can alter the way you engage with ideas, places, and people. Words are the containers of knowledge and culture, and are something entirely unique to human beings, having played a key role not only in the evolution of civilisation, but potentially in the evolution of human consciousness! Now that I’ve built up some anticipation, it’s probably past time that I tell you what this blog is about. This is a blog about the words and concepts in my field of study, which are either the least well-understood or the most misunderstood by general audiences. And if that sentiment makes sense to you, then stick around, dear reader, and you might just learn something…

As a young boy, I would enthusiastically tell people that I wanted to be a meteorologist when I was older! I severely misunderstood what meteorology is. I know people my age who still believe that meteorology is what you study if you want to write horoscopes, but I’m here to disappoint you, dear reader, and explain that this is not true. Meteorology derives from the Greek term meteōron, which referred to the phenomena of the sky – also known as weather! Meteorologists concern themselves with weather patterns and phenomena – such as variations in temperature, changes in sunlight, and rates of precipitation – and the science behind these phenomena. Meteorology is an exciting and vital discipline, which most people associate with weather forecasting, but which actually expands far beyond the morning news. It’s important to note that weather and climate are two different things. When we talk about weather, we’re talking about changes in atmospheric phenomena occurring over a short time scale, like weather patterns over a period of days or months. Climate, on the other hand, examines the atmospheric phenomena in specific regions as they take place over large periods of time, usually decades. A climatologist would thus concern themselves with long-term atmospheric changes, while a meteorologist would concern themselves with short-term atmospheric changes. Whether either person would concern themselves with their horoscope would ultimately depend on the individual.

At this point, you’re most likely asking, “So, did you become a meteorologist?” Well, in a way… I became a biometeorologist! My research falls within the field of biometeorology, a field of study which spans multiple disciplines, and which focuses on the relationship between living beings and the Earth’s climate and weather processes. My research examines the effects of climate on mental health, and thus falls under the umbrellas of Human Biometeorology and Health Biometeorology, but there are many subdisciplines within biometeorology. Plant Biometeorology focuses on the relationships between plant life, and phenology, and variations in climate, while Bovine Biometeorology focuses on the relationship between cattle, bison, buffalos – amongst other bovine animals – and climate. If you’re a fan of The 1975, you may have heard their song When We Are Together, the lyrics of which reference the impact of weather on the behaviours of cows! It doesn’t go into detail, obviously, but it’s still cool!

The field of biometeorology is an especially interesting one within our current cultural climate, as our literal, physical climate is changing. The impact of climate change on living organisms is something we desperately need to understand, and research within the field of biometeorology aims to do exactly that! What makes biometeorology fascinating to me is that we live through its phenomena every day! When you get that awful cough just before your June exams, that’s biometeorology! When you see a herd of cattle lying on their sides, and it rains later in the day, that’s bovine biometeorology, baby! It’s not definitively proven that cows can predict rain, but you get my point…

As I said, my research focuses on the relationship between climate and mental health, and there are a lot of mental health conditions which are misunderstood by the general public. The great thing about social media is that the stigma around mental health is slowly being chased away, and replaced with a greater awareness of mental health conditions by general audiences. However, it has also led to a lot of misinformation, and misunderstandings of these conditions. Social media often provides generalised takes on mental health, which do not convey the nuances, complexities and variabilities of mental health conditions and their symptomology. While social media can start conversations about mental health, these conversations can be superficial, or misleading, ultimately perpetuating stereotypes and misconceptions. Remember, dear reader, words are powerful. They can alter the way you engage with ideas, and with people. Anyone can say anything on the internet, and it’s not always true! Fact check everything, dear reader, even the thing you’re reading right now…

Readers’ Wish Fulfilled: Greatest Student Alive Posts Another Vlog!

I’m not sure if you’ve heard, dear reader, but dreams do come true! Specifically, your dreams! That’s right, I – Mukhtaar J. Waja, the greatest student alive – have allowed you another glimpse into my wonderous life. My second Day in the Life vlog is a massive improvement on the first in every way… That is if you enjoy existential dread and the ramblings of a 24-year-old who acts like he’s 80, and his grandchildren don’t visit him. Youngsters these days just don’t care… While you wait for your neglectful grandchildren to visit, why don’t you treat yourself to a good time by watching my video below. You deserve it, dear reader, you’ve been doing so well… I see you.

2023 has been, like all years tend to be, extremely long to live through and shockingly short to look back on. It is very easy to forget how much you are growing and changing when you are in the midst of all that growth and all those changes. The year began with me collecting data for my Master’s research, and now I’m trying to get medical data for my PhD, and am hoping to publish my current research once it’s completely complete. Before, my days consisted of conducting and transcribing interviews… and now, all these months later, my days consist of me writing up the findings of my work. That is progress, dear reader! And I am proud of it!

At every point in my academic journey, I felt like I would never reach the end of the year. At every point in my academic journey, I also felt like the end of the year was barrelling towards me with a hatred I can only describe as “personal” and “unappreciated”. Yet, every year – there have been six in total – I have actually done well! Humans have a terrible tendency to cling to negative memories over positive ones. It is a wonderful and effective way to bum yourself out, and convince yourself you don’t deserve praise and admiration. Sometimes, when I think back on my postgrad journey, I remember the chaos, the panic, that stressful, suffocating feeling you get when your work on the page is just so far divorced from what’s in your head, and you wonder why anyone let you get this far in the first place. It was their fault, really. But I’m trying not to do that anymore. I’m trying to remember the good times. I’m trying to remember the achievements – the final draft, not the first.

I am so proud of where I am right now. I think the people who inspire me to do this are proud of where I am right now. My vlog begins with a joke that has upset everyone who loves me (though my father did find it funny). It begins with a joke about how every day of my life will repeat an endless cycle of identical activities until the day I furiously drop-kick the proverbial bucket that everyone one day drop-kicks. I thought it was funny, in a dark way. But I know it’s not true. I know that life is full of surprises, and full of change. And I am so excited to experience it all. Thank you, dear reader, for being a part of one of the most exciting parts of my academic journey… Your grandkids don’t know what they’re missing.