糖心Vlog

This is your brain on PhD

Steven Franklin lays bare the questions and doubts that go through his mind as he sits down to work on his thesis

Published on
June 12, 2017
Last updated
July 16, 2018
Brain, logic, thinking
Source: iStock

When you start a PhD, the first words you hear are: 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be hard.鈥 As someone just starting out on an academic journey, your natural response 鈥淧ah! I鈥檒l prove them all wrong, I鈥檓 the exception, not the rule.鈥 But there's a reason they say these things 鈥 it鈥檚 because a PhD is difficult and sometime torturous too.

Thinking logically about the process, it shouldn鈥檛 be difficult at all. You have four years (eight if you鈥檙e doing it part-time), and so by my poor maths, it works out at roughly 65 words a day. Easy! We can all do that. I mean I鈥檝e written more here already! Sadly, it鈥檚 not that simple 鈥 what a pity. That logic doesn鈥檛 factor in any time for conceptualising your idea into something achievable, the research, the manipulation of that research into argumentative prose and then the inevitable rewrites.

Still, let鈥檚 be generous and say 200 words a day for less than two years and your project will be complete. In fact, you鈥檇 have almost written two.

Of course, there are other pressures that every PhD student must deal with. There鈥檚 an expectation for us to take some baby steps into the world of academia. We must present our work at seminars and conferences. Get used to our work being criticised and come back stronger from that. After all, no piece of work is ever the finished article. No one, to my knowledge, is yet to write the last word on any piece of history 鈥 although there are plenty of academics who鈥檇 be disturbed by the thought of their word not being the last.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Conferences are another way to introduce yourself to the academic world. Make a name for yourself. Socialise in the correct circles. These are the people that might one day examine you, become colleagues or write you a reference. We need to make the most of these exchanges. At the end of the day our future depends on it.

Then, if you鈥檙e like me, you don鈥檛 have funding, and so you must work to make ends meet. Mummy and daddy might be able to support you, but this 28-year-old would prefer some form of independence. I may be a student but I refuse to be seen as the stereotype. I work, undoubtedly more than I should, and I do my work well. One finds that if you work hard and do it to a high enough standard more doors open. People see your use. Before you know it you have an invite to the department Christmas meal. Not a bad achievement given you were employed on a short-term basis to help with some admin.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Factoring in those things, I鈥檓 now needing to write in the region of 400 words a day. Thinking about it, maybe a little less. It鈥檚 still achievable. Isn鈥檛 it? Well of course it is.

But our list does not end there. If you鈥檇 like to get anywhere in academia it鈥檚 desirable that you've taught. Published an article or two prior to thesis submission. Write a few academic book reviews. These, sadly, suck time. Time we, perhaps just I, do not have.

Let's also pause for a moment to reflect on the poker game that you play with your PhD peers. It鈥檚 an unspoken truth, but academia is essentially a game of 鈥渕y fish is bigger than yours鈥. It鈥檚 not necessarily about quality of produced work. It鈥檚 all about quantity. The more you have, the better you are. What 鈥渉ave鈥 can be anything, too. Scholarly works, academic prizes, research scholarships and media contributions are all ways of physically displaying that you鈥檙e on your way to greatness.

PhD students play the game as well as anybody else. Why blame them? The very nature of the profession dictates that you must sell yourself at every possible moment and be opportunistic, too. Don't get me wrong. I love my PhD peers but there are times when the game gets tiresome.

So, where am I left now? Ah yes, 500 words a day over 200 days and the job鈥檚 done!

But the truth is, I don鈥檛 think I'm clever enough to do it. After all, everyone who has a PhD is clever 鈥 it鈥檚 a sign of immense intelligence, isn鈥檛 it? Academically speaking, I鈥檝e never been the best. Haven鈥檛 tried the hardest. It鈥檚 easier to take when you get poor marks knowing you haven鈥檛 really tried 鈥 easier to shrug the whole thing off.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

I have ideas. I have a great PhD project, too. I鈥檇 go as far to say that it鈥檚 one of the most imaginative and intellectually challenging out of all my peers 鈥 but show me a student that doesn鈥檛 think or feel the same. Am I the correct person to do this, then? Will I do it justice? The pressure is on! It becomes rather self-fulfilling, this type of mindset.

Unlike this free-wheeling prose or stilted stream of consciousness (I鈥檒l let you be the judge), sitting down to write my PhD is hard. Sometimes paralysing. The big, empty white screen looms. The cursor blinks with depressing regularity. It鈥檚 writing time. Why aren鈥檛 you writing? I'm not writing because I鈥檝e been told my writing isn鈥檛 good enough. 鈥淪teven, it needs to be better, more engaging and passionate. The reader doesn鈥檛 need to feel like the process of reading your work is an insult to the English language.鈥

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Maybe I鈥檝e exaggerated there, but you get the idea. I鈥檓 too focused on sounding academic. Thinking where the correct place to insert that comma is. Remembering not to split the infinitive. Attempting to sound engaging, passionate and intelligent. Now I鈥檓 just overthinking things!

But the truth is, unlike this insight into the deeper workings of my mind, you do need to sound academic, adhere to academic styles and structures. Is the power of the prose I exhibit now simply constrained by the above? Should I be less like everyone else and more like me? Perhaps the question is how can I harness the confidence and readability of my writing currently?

This wasn鈥檛 really written with any agenda. I just got my iPad out and started typing. This entire splurge of words has been constructed on the train. My thoughts and typing flow being momentarily suspended as I had to change trains. I wonder if anyone could tell. At no point have I paused to think 鈥渃rap, where does the comma go?鈥 Or even think 鈥淚've failed to incorporate a semicolon or colon, isn鈥檛 my command of the English language poor?" Just a collection of sentences, with the occasional paragraph break and full stop. It may be simple. People may not like it. But this is how I write best.

As I wrote this I thought, would the people I aspire to write like be able to write like this? Be honest about the process and honest with themselves? For many, the very action would be sickening. Thoughts, laid bare on a page 鈥 an uncomfortable proposition for many, I鈥檇 imagine.

Despite what some have said, I am a writer. I can be engaging and more than capable of replicating what people deem as good prose. Maybe the very act of needing to see the success of my prose through the opinions of others is symptomatic of the issue itself.聽I'll sit down with my supervisor and talk this through 鈥 I鈥檒l even let him read it. I'm sure he鈥檇 be able to assist in redirecting this creativity into something positive.

Tomorrow I鈥檒l write about why I am doing a PhD. I imagine it will be an enlightening read. It will be entertaining. At the end of the day, history is fun. That's why we subject ourselves to this.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Steven Franklin is a visiting tutor in the history department and a PhD candidate at Royal Holloway, University of London.

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Related articles

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT