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Paul Goldsmith-Pinkham's avatar

This is unbelievably good and important stuff.

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Angela's avatar

I’m one of the people you are talking about here. I got in my own way while on the tenure track, and mostly didn’t submit my work. But my life is far from ruined, and my career is doing quite well, thank you, because it turns out there are many amazing things that one can do with one’s life outside academia, and failing the tenure track is an actually ok thing to do.

What’s notable to me as a person who has experienced this set of behavioral problems more than I think most people commenting here have is how much this has been *not* a generalizable experience after I left academia. I have no trouble being productive at work, happy, and self confident, nowadays. I don’t procrastinate and don’t ‘fail to submit’ - whatever it is that would be a corollary in my role now. In other domains and professional contexts I am actually good at doing stuff. Which after years of feeling like a failure/ruined/worthless in academia… was a real surprise.

I think there is something notable about this. Why does academia produce this behavior so much more than other contexts and careers? I understand the desire to blame the person/their choices, and to look within, but I think it’s actually more complicated than that.

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