Walk away 

No matter how committed you are, sometimes the best thing to do is to walk away.

“But why don’t you just quit?”

Anyone in academia who’s complained about their situation to friends has probably had to field that question. I had to, many many times. Then comes the squirming awkwardness of explaining why although that sounds pragmatic, it’s somehow not an option in academia; that even though you’re unhappy and probably haven’t been happy for a long time, that even though you’re working long hours to hang on to a dream that’s turning to vapours, that even though you don’t feel in control of your own career any more and have the sense that you’re being taken advantage of, you can’t just leave….because?

Because there’s nothing that’s as satisfying as academic research?
Because you have a responsibility to your students?
Because even though you know things in the system are bad, by staying you can try to make things better?
Because you’re not ready to leave?

But the point is, you can leave. And perhaps you should. I’m glad I did. 

In academia, we are so institutionalised that we forget we always have the option of walking away, and that it’s ok to do so. We all get so stuck in our routines (especially so when the jobs are few and far between, and you feel you have to hang on to anything you’ve got) that pulling the plug, even when it’s the right decision, is never as easy and straightforward as it should be.

It shows how confining academia has become when there’s loads of people who are miserable but who feel that they can’t quit. Many of us inhabit an environment that takes our love of learning and research, and the academic life supposedly attached to them, and uses it to extract as much from us as possible. 

Sure, perhaps Germany is a special case. With >90% of post-PhD scientists (i.e. postdocs and junior faculty) on fixed-term contracts, there’s an unhealthy and unhelpful imbalance in the power dynamics that can all-too-easily be leveraged to ugly effect…but look elsewhere and things don’t seem any better – the ongoing university strikes in the UK show that even when lecturer positions with permanent contracts are plentifully available, this still doesn’t stop people from being in a situation where they feel overworked and undervalued.

Am I just being soft? Complaining too much? Expecting too much special treatment? Maybe…but if so, why did I feel so exhausted? Why was there the feeling that I’d been going without pause for years and years? Why is it that when I read about the lives of 20th century scientists (especially the prewar and postwar ones) I get the impression they had so much time for thinking, talking, socialising, and recreation? Why is it that ever since I resigned I have felt absolutely amazing?

Might it be partly because…

  • I have always been hired without a clear job description, or any defined plan for career progression?
  • I had to raise 100% of my own salary, even while employed as a group leader? (In total, I raised 100% of my own salary for 11 of the 16 years I spent post-PhD, as postdoc and group leader)
  • I had people write horrible things, always anonymously, about the quality of my work, which ruined my confidence?
  • I have had to deal with the chronic uncertainty of not having a permanent contract for the entirety of my working life?

It…doesn’t sound like fun, does it?

And let’s assume, just for a minute, that things right now are actually no different to 20 years ago – but if so, that makes it negligent in the extreme that those currently with their hands on the levers of power have done so little to change things for the better. This is survivorship bias in the extreme, and a wilful propagation of an unhealthy and unfair work culture.

It’s a feature of most toxic relationships that the partner being dominated and undermined is taken for granted, that their efforts are never enough and will never be sufficiently appreciated. Their value can only truly be sfelt when they walk away. Our value will only be felt when we, when enough of us, walk away.

I’ll end with an excerpt from an email written by a friend, which applies to so many of us:
 
I can also say with extreme confidence that any organisation you work at or for will be all the better for it, and you have the ability to make an incredible impact. I think I’ve also learned the hard way over the years that sometimes institutions or situations just are toxic because not everyone has the integrity or values that you or I might have, and you can exhaust yourself fighting something that feels impossible to understand…but after the event I’ve generally come to realise that I was a better person than that environment and the values of the people controlling it. That’s not to say there aren’t always things to learn, but I’ve always been overly logical and simplistic about human beings and underestimated that some people simply don’t have any interest in your (or ultimately their institution’s) interests – simply their own. Given you can’t always control that, leaving is actually the thing to do.”

Acknowledgements: A huge thanks to PR and JH for the discussions and solidarity.

5 thoughts on “Walk away 

  1. Reading your blog really discourages me from going to academia. Maybe that is even a good thing. But you can read these kind of stories in every sector. Or so it seems. Which raises a question: Will I really be better off in the industry, management or whatever it might become? Toxicity just seems so be inherent to humans. But why, I cannot say.

    When I began dipping into science, through my A-level education, especially through my biology courses, I instantly became mesmerized. Prior to that I never would have imagined even just getting into university. PhDs were fascinating, research and science seemed like a miracle to me, almost like magic (it still is). Of course I was oblivious to all the intricacies of biology, biochemistry and human physiology. But it was certainly one of the most jaw-dropping moments to understand what DNA is and how it works. It was settled. I finished my A-level and applied at the JMU and quickly moved from my old hometown to Wuerzburg. I couldn’t wait to interact with all these smart people, people I could look up to. Scientists always seemed highly prestigious, something one can aspire to, too, figuring out the clockwork of life itself, what makes us tick the way we do.

    But my slight realization now, not even fully immerged into the system myself – but witnessing every step of my girlfriends PhD with all the good and especially all the bad moments -, is that it is, for the most part, a dog-eat-dog society (‘Ellenbogengesellschaft’) and what is most valuable is ones own career and that of your students. Maybe the group/department of my girlfriend just isn’t the right sample that one should look at when looking at academia?

    I was looking forward to becoming a renowned researcher, a knowledged person, that like myself back in my younger years, one could aspire to. Teaching and guiding young minds as an old pal who’s established himself in the research society and achieved great things. At least as a best case scenario. (One can still dream.)

    Now that prospect seems to, slightly, fade and melt, like on an oil painting, becoming more and more unrecognizable, while at the same time revealing a blank canvas that does not offer any other perspective. Reading your blog, it is exactly what you seem to need. I, on the other hand, got onto this trajectory and rejigged my entire life for it and as of now, there is no Plan B.

    Maybe I’m a little too cynical, and before thinking about any of that, I should start and finish my PhD.

    Either way, your blog and posts gave me valuable insights into some of the topics of academia and nudged me into thinking a little more intensive about certain questions.

    Thanks for that. All the best.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hi Rich, thanks again for taking the time to write. Lots to chew over here… (and I think Ellenbogengesellschaft is my new favourite word in German). 🙂

      – To be clear, I will always be evangelical about science and I will always have a strong ideological commitment to the role that academia has to play in society.

      – The problem at the moment is that I feel I cannot in good faith recommend academia as a long-term career choice to young scientists at this moment in time. It might change, and I really hope it does, but right now academia is overstocked and under regulated and that allows all kinds of bad experiences to accumulate.

      – I still think a PhD carries lifelong benefits, but it’s essential to make sure you get into a good and supportive group. You can get damaged almost beyond repair in a bad group.

      – I think the critical thing for young scientists now is to be planning their post-PhD career from an early stage (year 2 onwards, perhaps). It’s never too early to be looking around and planning – and if the blog has helped catalyse that mindset, that’s fantastic. 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

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