Escape the Ivory Tower

  • Home
  • Blog
  • Resources
  • Tell Your Story
  • About Julie

November 24, 2015

Why Transition Is Kicking Your Ass

I know I’ve talked about this before, but it bears repeating, because our culture does a crap job of helping us understand and live through transition.

When I talk about transition, I mean any change that affects our sense of who we are. Becoming an assistant professor after years of being a graduate student is a transition. Becoming a parent is a transition. Leaving a relationship is a transition. Even moving is a transition. But leaving a career that defines itself as more than just a job? Definitely a transition.

There are three basic stages to transition. I’m going to list them linearly, but they often overlap and repeat and show up all higgledy-piggledy.

Stage 1: Grief

Even when the transition is something you want, grief is always part of the picture, because loss is always part of the picture. Becoming an assistant professor means losing the structure of someone else being in charge, the lovely linear pathway that’s all defined for you. Becoming a parent might mean losing those days when you could do nothing but sleep and watch Netflix. This kind of grief can be hard to recognize and admit to, because you can feel churlish or ungrateful feeling grief around something you want. We have a cultural story that grief only shows up around things you don’t want, so you might question whether or not you really want this thing. But good change and grief can coexist.

When the transition is one you’d rather not have, well, the grief can flatten you. All the manifestations of grief we’re familiar with from the Kubler-Ross model come out to play: denial (no, I can’t leave!), bargaining (maybe if I do X, THEN Y will happen), anger (goddamit, I did everything right!), sadness (but I loved it so), etc.

Stage 2: Destabilization

I’ve heard this stage called the dark night of the soul, and that’s pretty accurate. You’re no longer who you were, and you aren’t yet who you will be, so your sense of self, of who you are, is splintered. There are people who really love this stage, because they love the sense of endless possibility, but for most of us it’s just bewildering and overwhelming and kind of terrifying.

It boils down to one big existential “what the hell am I supposed to do next?”

Stage 3: Coalescing

In this stage, the new version of things is starting to become familiar. You’re starting to feel like maybe you’ll be competent at this. You’re starting to think things will be okay. There’s still a lot you don’t yet know or understand, but the ground is a little more firm under your feet and you basically know which direction to head.

All of this exhausts your brain

In the past few years, there’s been a lot of research on what’s called decision fatigue. Our brains have a finite capacity for decision-making (which includes the application of willpower). When we’ve used up our capacity, our ability to self-regulate, to make considered decisions, and to stick to choices in the face of temptations goes straight into the toilet.

During normal non-transition life, a lot of decisions are pre-made. Problems are pre-solved. You know how to get to the post office. You know where your pants are and which ones are appropriate for this workplace. You know who to ask about that project. You know what the weather will likely do. Habits can get a bad rap, but routine helps us preserve our decision-making powers for other things.

During transition, few decisions are pre-made and few problems are pre-solved. Where’s the post office? Who knows? What are the dinner options? Got me. What’s the right thing to wear to work? Who can help you get that data?

All of this means that your decision-making, problem-solving capacity gets used up really quickly. When you run out, you’re likely to be more emotional, more prone to either freezing or making rash decisions, and more likely to be clumsy.

This is why transition, even transition that seems small in the scheme of your life, can kick your ass. A friend of mine recently started a new job, and even though everything else in her life is the same, she’s coming home from work ready to go to bed without dinner. She’s just that worn out.

When the transition is bigger, or when transitions are piled on top of one another (as happens when we combine moving with new jobs or new careers), well, the flattening can be epic.

Self-care is the only thing that can blunt the edges of the flattening, but nothing can actually make it not exhausting. Unfortunately, the only way to get to not exhausted is to keep going until things become familiar.

So if you’re leaving or even thinking about leaving, know that it’s not only okay, but completely normal to feel grief, to feel unmoored and panicky, and to feel completely worn out by all of it. This, too, shall eventually pass.

Filed Under: Grief and Leaving 2 Comments

November 17, 2015

The 4 Things I Say Repeatedly to People Leaving Academia

As I think I’ve mentioned before, my wife has spent the last few years going through seminary, internship, and all of the accompanying institutional work. From my outsider’s perspective, it’s been remarkably like academia, right down to the vocation, low pay, institutional hurdles, and the mythology.

In the end, she decided that congregational ministry wasn’t for her, and for a while she turned her attention to applying for jobs.

Despite all the conversations we’ve had over the years, she became temporarily convinced that because she wasn’t going to get a job doing what she had trained for (ministry), she was limited to jobs in the fields she’d had before she went back to school: fundraising or telemarketing. The problem was, she didn’t want to go back into fundraising or telemarketing, having left them both for good reasons. Cue the spiral of panic: if she wasn’t going to be a minister, and she didn’t want to do fundraising or telemarketing, she was never going to get a job.

Now, I’ve spent too long talking to people switching careers to believe any of this, but it makes complete sense that it was part of her process

Transition is hard. Transition is destabilizing. Transition is exhausting, which makes things like figuring out the next steps of your life even more challenging. Leaving a career path you trained for, that was part of your identity, is most certainly a transition.

When you’re in the middle of a transition, it can be a challenge not to walk into walls. (No really — coordination goes to shit.) In that context, is it any wonder that trying to think beyond the categories of familiar career paths doesn’t happen naturally?

We eventually had a conversation, my wife and I, in which I told her about all the different jobs my friends do, and reminded her of all the various jobs I’ve done over the years. None of them were the kinds of jobs that emerge linearly from degrees, and none of them were the kinds of jobs it’s easy to know about from the outside. But once we started talking about them, she realized that she could totally do that one! And that one! Okay, not that one, her ability to manage paper is negligible, but the one over there, that involved corralling people? Right up her alley.

This is why I tend to say four things over and over again when I’m working with people who are leaving academia.

  1. You have more skills than you think.
  2. The best way to find out what jobs actually exist in the world is to ask people what they do and what they like about it.
  3. Of course you’re exhausted and grieving, and that is as it should be.
  4. Step one is always abundant, luxurious self-care, as much as you can possibly stand.

You’re going to be okay. You’re going to figure it out. And it makes total sense if, along the way, you have a few meltdowns of the “I’m doomed” variety. Not because you are doomed, but because that just seems to be part of the process.

Filed Under: Grief and Leaving Leave a Comment

July 7, 2014

Good Times and Bad Times

Whenever you’re considering some kind of big step in your life — changing careers, having a kid, moving to the desert to write — someone, somewhere, will usually tell you there’s no good time to do it. The implication is that you’re just stalling and you should just go do it already.

But there are bad times

“There’s no good time” really boils down to “there’s no perfect time, when the stars are aligned and nothing will be hard and no one will be upset.” That’s true. But there are bad times.

If you’re already in the midst of one big life transition or crisis? It’s a bad time.

If you’re physically or mentally unwell and it’s likely some time and self-care would improve the situation? It’s a bad time.

If you’re swamped under caretaking, whether of a small human or a parent or an ill spouse? It’s a bad time.

There are lots of valid reasons why “not now” is a perfectly good strategy. It doesn’t mean you must be procrastinating, or if you just push on through, everything will be fine.

We don’t always get to choose

Unfortunately, sometimes life piles it on without us ever choosing to add a health crisis in the middle of a job search process on top of credentialing and moving across the country. Shit happens.

When shit happens, all you can do is batten down the hatches, focus on the things that absolutely have to happen no matter what, do what you can to take care of yourself, and keep breathing. When our family recently had a pile of shit happen, our goal was “everyone is fed and nothing is toxic.” We went to bed ridiculously early. We ate a lot of takeout and prepared foods. When we could finally catch our breath and look around, there were some unbelievable piles of dog fur rolling around, but we hadn’t made it all worse by trying to do too much.

If you’re down to “look for a job even though everything is a disaster because hey, rent is important,” then there you are. Shit has happened and you’re doing what you need to do. “Doing what you need to do” is intensely personal. What’s on your list is what’s on your list, and rock on.

Self-care, self-care, self-care

Whether shit is happening and you’re having to deal, or whether you’ve chosen to step off into a big life transition of some kind, the best thing you can do is ramp up the self-care. Keeping your personal resources high and your well-being front and center will help you get to the other side without completely falling apart (or at least without worsening the falling apart).

Take two naps a day. Vent to friends. Go for a run. Color. Lie on the floor and stare at the ceiling. Take showers. Eat something, anything. Take your meds.

Whatever it is that works for you, do that, without beating yourself up for the times when it doesn’t happen.

And for heaven’s sake, if it’s not a good time, consider putting off additional big life transitions until things calm down.

Filed Under: Practicalities 2 Comments

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Meet Julie

Want to know what I'm all about? Click here to listen to me get interviewed by Daniel Mullen of The Unemployed Philosopher.

You can also learn more about my history -- Read More…

Myths and Mismatches eCourse

Jo VanEvery and I have put together a free eCourse on the most common myths and mismatches we see in people who are unhappy in academia.

It's one lens through which you can examine your own unhappiness and better diagnose the problem -- which makes finding a solution that much easier.

Find out more by clicking here!

Recent Posts

  • Writing Resumes and Cover Letters? Here Are Some Tips
  • I Still Think Calling Is Important
  • You Need Abundant, Luxurious Self-Care
  • Give Yourself Room to Fall Apart
  • Tip: Ask People About Their Jobs

Site Links

Affiliate Policy

Site Credits

Find Me Online

  • Instagram
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2009–2015 by Julie Clarenbach · All Rights Reserved