Have you ever wondered just how many of those knitter's out there are scientists?  The Keyboard Biologist is a bioinformatician (read: one type of scientist), many might know that The Bookish Girl is an environmental scientist, and even Grumperina is a science geek.  If you're like me, embarking on an adventure of returning to college this fall for a potential science degree, you might wonder these things.  Thankfully, there is the ScienceKnits webring.
But what is it about science and knitting?  I mean, all kinds of scientists?  Have you SEEN how many library science knitters are out there?  Here I always thought that I was an anomaly.  I love analyzing and research and reading and just thoroughly geeking out.  But I'm an artist.  I've been involved with art in some form for as long as I can remember (drawing bunnies in church as a 4-5 year old).  I've always leaned toward the arts, including majoring in art at my first attempt in college.  Surprisingly, to me anyway, I realized in my mid-twenties that the reason I had been focusing on art and never knowing what the hell I wanted to do with an art degree (not teach, not own a business, not sell my art) was because art was what my mother really valued of my talents.  So I promptly dropped out of college.  Insert angst, cross country moves and then.... social work?  How did I end up here?  I ended up here because when I would produce art in my formative years everyone, not just my mother, exclaimed what a great artist I would be someday.  Huh.
Why not science?  (And this is the part that really boggles my mind.)  My chemistry teacher in high school was a slightly less tall version of Ben Stein in Ferris Bueller's Day Off and bored me to sleep.  
So I quit chemistry and never thought about science again* until recent years when I've noticed a trend in the types of things I geek out with online.  Discovery Channel news, Science Daily, studies, statistics, nutritional science especially.  It's been about a 2-3 year process for me to realize that my personality and interests for a career really lie more along the science part of me than the art part of me.  I like art.  I make various forms of art all the time in my free time: knitting, drawing, baking, cooking, embroidery, sewing, etc.  But would I want to do any of those things as a job?  No way.  It would ruin it for me.  I'm not a business person and I have no business sense.
So I did what any self-respecting, analytical, going-back-to-college, geeky, late twenty-something would do: I took a career test.  Not one of those online jobbies, though I have taken my share of those, but a real honest to God career test.  The Campbell Interest and Skill Survey at my college's career exploration center.  For once, I was completely honest in all the answers.  Do you want to read stories to children as a job?  No freaking way.  Do you enjoy working with people on a one-to-one basis?  Not even a little bit, and I don't even feel bad about it.  Okay, I feel a little bit bad since, you know, I *do* work with people occasionally at my present job but it's one of my least favorite parts and I'm being honest here dammit! 
Would you enjoy working as a scientist in a research lab?  Why yes, yes I believe I would.
*Except that Biology course I loved and aced in my Freshman year of college.  Get a clue, Katie?