Life of lessons good for the mind
James McGaugh may be a mild-mannered professor to most of the
students at UC Irvine, but how many know that this award-winning PhD,
who is the director of the Center for the Neurobiology of Learning
and Memory, enjoys things other than simply researching? This former
music and drama major takes pleasure in woodworking and playing the
saxophone and the clarinet in concerts.
The 72-year-old recently sat a spell with the Pilot’s Luis Pena to
talk about what could have been and what was his ultimate path.
Where did you grow up?
I was born in Long Beach. We only lived there a few months, and my
father returned to his position in Nogales, Ariz. The first couple of
years we lived in a little town called Claypool, which is near Miami
and Globe. It’s a mining town in Arizona that’s 150 miles east of
Phoenix.
It was during the Depression, so there was 100% unemployment.
Nobody was employed, except that my father was a Methodist minister.
So he had a small salary from the church. Mainly, people there,
including us, lived on winter vegetable gardens, cows that gave milk
and eggs. A lot of bartering went on. Then we moved to Nogales when
I was about 3 years old. A very interesting border town, which is in
the newspapers a lot these days. But then, it was a very quiet little
town.
What kind of childhood did you have?
We lived across the street from the public library, and I read a
lot. I came from a family that valued books, so I read an awful lot.
I was also an invalid. I had a disease called Brucillosis, which is a
little bit like malaria. You get it from drinking unpasteurized milk.
It’s not common these days because everything is pasteurized. I was
an invalid, so that part of my life was not very happy. So, I would
say early childhood was tough.
How did you end up in Newport-Mesa?
Dean Edward Steinhaus, the dean of biological sciences, invited me
to become the founding chair of the department. We now call it
neurobiology and behavior. This was a very exciting opportunity to
have the first academic department of its kind in the world that
focused exclusively on brain and behavior. So, I accepted the job
instantly and moved with my family from Eugene, Ore., to Newport
Beach exactly 40 years ago to Eastbluff.
What are your greatest accomplishments in life?
Well, it always starts with family, for heavens sake. Becky and I
have three grown children and seven grandchildren all living in the
area. Our lives are pretty much centered around family life. It’s a
wonderful achievement to have a good family, a nice large family. I
have appreciated the opportunity to build a department here. For
eight years, I was executive vice chancellor of the campus, and I
appreciated that opportunity. I had the opportunity to found this
research institute. I look at it not in terms of achievements but in
terms of opportunities. I had the opportunity to spend 47 years of my
life to study.
If you could re-do one moment or incident in your life, what would
it be?
I wish that I would have practiced hard in my music when I was a
child. My father committed suicide when I was 9 years old. After
that, the finances of the family were terrible. So I had to start
working when I was very young. So, I worked after school and summers
from about the time I was 10 years old, selling newspapers, working
in factories, all kinds of things. I worked all the way through
college. I had a huge financial responsibility from the time I was
very young. What do I regret? I wish I had more time to play music. I
don’t have any serious regrets. I don’t have any things that I would
like to go back and change. I guess that’s strange, isn’t it? But I
don’t. Life has been good.
What profession other than yours would you like to have tried?
Music and drama. . I was actually studying opera in college as a
minor. On a lark, I saw an announcement in the San Francisco
Chronicle saying that there were auditions for the San Francisco
Light Opera. And so, I drove up to San Francisco and auditioned. I
got the leading role in the opera. And the next day I had to call
them up and tell them sorry I couldn’t do it because I was a college
student. Looking back, I guess if I had an alternate career, it would
have been music or drama, if I had enough talent to do that.
What are some differences between a typical day in your life now
versus a day in your life 30 years ago?
Twenty or 30 years ago, the days were just about the way they are
now. I run a research laboratory. I teach. I have administrative
responsibilities, so I have to see students. I have to raise money to
keep the research going. I have family life. I suppose the big change
is that I don’t have any young children in the house. So, I’m
granddad rather than dad to small children. My wife and I have a lot
more free time than we ever had before. So, I travel a lot. When I
travel, my wife can go with me because we don’t have the
responsibility of children at home.
What is the greatest lesson you’ve learned in your life?
The greatest lesson that I’ve learned in my life is that if there
is something important that needs to be done, there’s one person that
has more control over that than anything or anyone else, and that’s
me. So, it’s a deep sense of personal responsibility for my own life
and the things in my life that are important to me.
What do you treasure most?
Well, family. Ideas in science. I treasure searching for truth. I
treasure honesty. I treasure and value people who value other people.
I admire those rare politicians who understand the importance of
individuals and what they need in life, education. And I despise
those who don’t value education enormously at all levels -- early
education, high school, college and adult education. Expanding the
mind is critically important.
What would you like people to always remember about you?
I hope that they will recall that I was decent and fair and
supportive. Everyone would like to think that they made a difference.
I think we all have a strong responsibility to make the world a
better place. And I hope that I will be given a tiny bit of credit
for that.
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