Yesterday on Twitter I said, “If you would have told me 1 year ago what my life would be like today I never would have believed you.”
After I said that, some of you asked me to share my experience. Since the story is a bit longer than 140 characters, I decided to write a post (or two or three depending how long it takes) to talk about the life lessons that I have learned over the past two years. I always get a lot of questions about my career change so I thought I would finally do that now that I have some clarity and perspective.
Let me preface this story by telling you a few things about myself:
- I have generally stayed inside the lines throughout my life (i.e., didn’t take risks)
- I have always had a lot of anxiety and I never did many things that took me outside of my comfort zone.
- I have done many things in my life because I thought it would make other people happy.
- I never had any idea what my passions were (see here for more info)
With this in mind, let’s begin the journey of the past 2 years of my life, shall we?
My Undergraduate Dreams…
Throughout my undergraduate program in psychology all I ever wanted was to get into grad school. This was mainly because once I was enrolled in psychology, I quickly realized that there weren’t many job options for someone with a BAH in psychology. So I worked hard at getting into grad school. I figured it was my only hope.
When I was selected out of 300 applicants to be 1 of 4 students to enter a grad school, I was literally on cloud 9. I couldn’t believe it. All the hard work during my undergrad had paid off. All of the studying, applications , major exams, thesis, and the interviews paid off. I applied to 5 schools and was accepted to 1. Of course, I accepted it.
But, I will tell you what my gut feeling was. It was bad. That little voice in my head was trying to tell me that this school was not a perfect fit for me. But I told myself I would be crazy to pass it up. So many students would kill to be in my shoes. So I accepted it and said I would make the best of it.
I thought to myself that I was now going to be ok. I was going to go to grad school and get my Masters and PhD degrees and become a Professor. I would make lots of money and have a respected career. I would do research that I love. Life was going to work out.
Well, life doesn’t always work out as we plan and things aren’t always what they seem…
I entered grad school, Fall 2007:
The four of us who were selected into the program were immediately called the ‘Fab Four’ by our advisors and professors. There was a lot of pressure put on us right from the beginning. They frequently told us that they saw so much promise in us and couldn’t wait until we cultivated our research talents.
Secretly, we all felt like we didn’t measure up. They quickly told us that we would likely have the Imposter Syndrome which was when new grad students think that they got accepted by mistake and everyone else is smarter than them.
During the first week of grad school, we had a Grad School 101 presentation where we were told just exactly how this grad school thing works. Sounds easy enough, right? Well, you can imagine our shock when we were told that we should have 2-3 published articles by the end of our Master’s program, and 8-10 published articles by the end of our PhD career if we wanted to be competitive in the job market. Oh and not just any publishing’s either. We should have publishing’s in top tier journals! We were also told that we needed to put about 60-70 hours a week into our studies, readings, research, and thesis. We would not expect a social life by the way. On top of that we should join committees, volunteer, and schmooze with top notch researchers to get our foot in the door. We were told to live and breathe psychology.
I went home the first week of grad school and cried my eyes out.
I didn’t let anyone see me. I told myself to pull it together and deal with it. I wouldn’t even tell Eric that I had doubts my first week.
I hoped that the stress would pass. I thought that my intense anxiety was a result of the adjustment phase and I would soon become accustomed to the culture I was now embedded in.
But I was sadly mistaken.
The demands piled up. The stress got bigger. Weekly brown bags frequently reminded us of the intense competition in the job market. Oh and don’t expect to apply for a job directly after finishing your PhD either. You need to secure a post-doc to be competitive. And not just any post-doc, a post-doc with a top tier institution! To become a Professor of psychology (in Canada anyways), you are looking at 2 years for your Masters + 4-5 years for your Doctorate + 1 for Post-Doc. The average is around 7-8 years. I knew many people that took much longer though.
Luckily throughout all of this stress, I could vent to a fellow Fab Four member who I had become good friends with named Jane. We frequently vented to each other about the stresses placed upon us and we quickly become disenchanted with our experience. Grad school was nothing like we envisioned it to be. I am forever grateful for meeting Jane because she got me through some really low moments. I don’t know what I would have done without her.
Then there was the MA Thesis.
I did proposal, after proposal, after proposal. Nothing was good enough. My thesis drafts and preliminary studies were scraped one after another and I began to lose hope. Once I finally had a study underway, I was in over my head with statistical analyses so complex I had to seek out PhD students for desperate help. I was lost in analyses for months and months.
There is much more to the story than this, but I can’t really talk about it publicly on the blog.
I left campus, walking back to my car, and cried. On numerous occasions. I cried so many drives home, calling Eric and just bawling my eyes out in frustration. I remember one time it was pouring out on my drive home. I called Eric crying and I had to pull over at a gas station because I couldn’t see the road through my tears and the rain.
As the pressure got more intense, eating resurfaced as a battle in my life. All the progress I had made with beating the disordered eating started to slide away. I had no hope. I started restricting my intake to gain control (or so I thought). I started to count calories and weigh myself each morning as a way to obtain some false sense of control over my life.
I was going backwards, yet the days moved forward.
Even though Eric and I were happily engaged since December 2007, the stress in my life started to negatively affect our relationship. Eric felt helpless because nothing he said or did could help my situation. I felt helpless. I frequently snapped at him for no reason. I didn’t know what to do. I contemplated dropping out of the program, but deep down I knew I could never do it.
April 2008:
Then in April 2008 I did something really stupid…
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To be continued…
Part 2: My new career as a researcher + finishing my degree + The hardest thing I have ever done.
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Today’s Question: Have you ever had a hard time in school? Or in a certain course? Or with a professor?
Thanks for sharing this with us, this topic is hitting close to home. I am currently a Junior biochem major- I wanted to go to med school however I am not sure if that is exactly what I want to do. Also it is hard to get perfect scores on ever exam. It just seems like EVERYONE is so much smarter than I am. But I am planning on attending grad school in two years in public heath. So we will see how that goes. Sorry for all the rambling…
Absolutely! I can totally relate to your story, except that I majored in Accounting. I can’t wait to hear more – what a cliffhanger. I know this is a hard thing to do, to publicly display your struggles, but your blog is such an inspiration.
Wow. That sounds sad and stressful. My spouse has a PhD in engineering, and I work with a lot of engineering PhD’s, so I know how stressful that can be.
Wow. That sounds sad and stressful. My spouse has a PhD in engineering, and I work with a lot of engineering PhD’s, so I know how stressful that can be. Personally, I quit at a master’s, and a non-thesis one at that.
While I haven’t experienced that as far as a degree program goes, I did have a class that I dropped. It was a history class, that required 400 pages of reading a week, plus reading the Wall Street Journal, plus extra reading. I lasted two weeks (remember, I was an engineering major!!)
I have been in “that place” at work though, from time to time, where I go home and cry. Like the day that I got called back to work at 6 pm, on my husband’s birthday, when I SHOULD have been cooking him dinner. Usually though, I regroup, reorder my priorities (husband, son, health, sleep), and learn to say “no”. And it all gets better.
My husband got through grad school on the “7-year plan” vs. the normal “5-year plan” which was less stressful I think. And he eschewed the thought of teaching, getting research money, and tenure. We’re much happier for it.
Can’t wait for part II!
I had a very hard time in grad school. For two years I was a full-time student, a graduate assistant and teaching/working 20-30 hours a week! I was sleeping 3-6 hours a night and I was miserable. Thankfully, a year later, things are much better! As you said, a year can change a lot!
love the story, I can’t wait to read the rest!
Thanks so much for sharing your story.
I’ve definitely experienced problems with school. When I was doing my undergrad thesis, I was a mess for the roughly 9 months I spent on the project. Initially, things were fine. Then everything seemed to go wrong. One week before my study was to start running participants, my supervisor told me I’d have to get someone else to help me run it because the other grad student (my initial helper) was expected to help another MA student since their studies were more related. I was in tears, completely panicked and ready to quit my thesis. I also didn’t get the number of participants I wanted and I felt completely overwhelmed by lesson plans (I was doing a reading intervention for kids). My participants were also not fully ideal – my supervisor and I wanted mainly ESL kids but we had such a hard time recruiting that we just took whoever we could get. There were a lot of tears over this project from the beginning to the end. I felt lost a lot and it was honestly the most challenging year of my schooling so far. I think it was especially hard to take because I’m used to being a straight A student and suddenly I was struggling, which is uncharacteristic for me. I also didn’t feel like I was fully in control. I was super stressed out and several friends said I just wasn’t myself when I really had to buckle down. I definitely wasn’t as happy as I usually was. In the end at least the hard work did pay off and things worked out, but my experience really made me consider what type of grad school is the best for me. I know now that I do NOT want to be a researcher!
I can’t wait to hear the rest of your story. So far it sounds similar to my junior year in college.
Way to leave us hanging! I really can’t wait to read part 2.
Thank you for sharing that Angela. It was so compelling and heartfelt and honest. I never knew that side of your grad school experience before.
And I know what you mean by “If you would have told me 1 year ago what my life would be like today I never would have believed you.” I am totally there right now… in a good way :)
I can’t wait to hear more about this! As someone who has been contemplating the risky path for awhile I love hearing how other people made positive changes. (Seems fitting too, in light of Caitlin’s post today!)
Thank you for sharing this… although I’m applying to Psych PhD programs now so this is maybe not the best thing for me to be reading! I’m already nervous enough!
I’m currently in the “figure out what I want to do with my life” phase… and I’m debating pursuing a career with the degree I have versus going back to school for something I think I’m more passionate about. I really admire your honesty in this post–and I think it will help a lot of people in similar situations. I can’t wait to read the rest of your story!
The last 6 months of my doctorate program (in physical therapy) were a nightmare. I had a clinical rotation from hell which caused me to lose about 8 pounds in 3 weeks due to the anxiety I felt (and therefore, loss of appetite). I didn’t even know if I would be able to graduate for sure until a week and a half before the graduation date. It’s a terribly long story I may eventually go into on my blog, but it was definitely an awful time full of lots of tears!! Thank God I made it through!
Thanks for sharing your stories, Angela! I look forward to the next post on this topic. You are always so inspirational!!
Thanks for the post, it makes me feel better about how unsure I am about going back to school. I was going to go for an MA in history but I’d hate the work involved (but love the reading). I’ve mostly decided that I want to get a second bachelors in dietetics, I’d enjoy it once I get there (I think) but I dread taking all the biology and chemistry pre-reqs. I hope it will be worth it!
This story really hits home for me! I got my BEd in 2004, and finished the requirements for my BA (Psychology) in December, and had applied for graduation. Then I found out I could do the honours. I canceled my graduation and started the classes for my honours. I am doing my Thesis now, and will be done in December. My plan was to go into grad school and eventually be a professor, but I have been really debating it over the last little while. I don’t know how people manage that and a life … and I want a life.
Oh my gosh… that is such a terrible experience for you to have to go through :(
I’m sorry you endured that, I look forward to reading the next installment.
This only proves though how much of an amazing woman you are, to have gone through all that and to have come out on top, strong and determined, inspiring thousands. So thank you for that.
I’m almost finished my second to last year of high school, today, actually, is the last day of the third term and then next term we have about 3 weeks, then exams and then we’re done for the year.
But I have found high school extremely stressful and emotionally challenging.
They keep drilling it into our minds that if we fail now, our future is gone, which is a huge dramatization but it still stands to stress me out. The stress of needing to do well, applying to polytechs and universities and the general immaturity of some of the idiots here make it extremely hard to get through.
Also, I’ve never been one to conform to the expectations of society, and so, being a girl who thrives on healthy eating, exercise and just generally living a healthy lifestyle, I get shut out a lot from others around me..
I have one more year left and I can’t wait for it to be over. High school has been a painful, stressful and emotional roller coaster which I can’t wait to get off.
I for one didn’t have a great highschool experience myself, and I know MANY people can relate to those hellish highschool years. The one thing I loved about university was that it was nothing like highschool for me. Sure, there are still cliques, but for the most part you have so much more freedom, tons of cool people to meet, and learning becomes more fun than anything.
Wow, this post really touched me. It almost made me cry, I feel the same way right now. I’m in Law school in California (first year) and I feel like quitting already. I feel like there are so many people counting on me. Sometimes it gets so hard and I feel so much pressure from every angle in my life. I feel like I have worked so hard, put so much time and energy and I have nothing left to give. Thank you for your post. It really hit home today.
I totally understand. I would never have believed this would be life if you told me two years ago. But I love it!
Angela, I cannot tell you how inspirational you are. I first subscribed to this blog because you had cool baking recipes and a sunny attitude, but I have identified with you more and more as the time has gone by, and I admire you in so many ways. Thank you for reminding me to listen to my gut, body, and heart.
-Fellow disenchanted psychology student.