Why would I even write a blog post about my year 2019, then? Well, every fail comes with a win, and vice versa. To demonstrate: The first win of 2020 is that we booked a nice hotel in the Austrian Alps for cross-country skiing. The first fail, associated with that (and the actual reason for writing the blog post): I came down with a cold, and need to stay in the hotel room. And, again, as an attached win, I get to enjoy this view:
So, without any further ado, here's a list of my 2019 win/fail pairs:
| Win | Fail | 
| Finalised a manuscript | Rejected by 5 different journals | 
| For a grant proposal, got together
			a team of amazing researchers from 13 different countries who
			agreed to collaborate with me on a cross-linguistic project | Proposal has a <10% chance of
			being funded | 
| Started learning Natural Language
			Processing (and data science, and programming in general) | Still need to improve a lot before
			I can actually apply it in my research, or for looking for jobs
			outside of academia (New Year’s Resolution for 2020) | 
| Started supervising my first PhD
			student | Issues with funding beyond the
			first year of her PhD (mainly due to stupid university
			bureaucracy) | 
| Started teaching | Not sure how happy my students are
			with me hijacking their “research methods in clinical
			psychology” course and turning it into a course about statistics
			and open science | 
| Learned that if I get an ERC
			starting grant, I’ll be guaranteed a professorship | Downloaded the manual for writing
			an ERC starting grant proposal, realised that the manual is 50 pages of
			densely written bureaucratese text, started wondering if I really want a
			professorship that much... | 
| Data collection for new project
			going well, very competent research assistants | One of the testing laptops gave
			research assistant a strong electric shock and stopped working | 

