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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Location
    Good things gro-oh-ow in Ontario!
    Posts
    382

    Grad School Anxiety

    Hi everyone!

    It has been months since I've been on here and able to keep up with cycling. I've tried to pop in every once and awhile to keep up with everything and everyone but I've been insanely busy. I've really really missed TE. I've been away at grad school since August and I can't tell you how much I've missed my bike and the outdoors, too. I had to leave them at home when I moved here for the year.

    Anyway, I know a few of you TE women have been through grad school and have offered great advice in the past and I've been going through some very tough weeks so I thought I'd drop by and ask about my situation.

    I'm in a non-thesis program which means I have to write a 30-50 page paper that is due July 20. I've written a draft and revised it a couple of times now but I'm feeling completely freaked out. I've been thrown off track a couple of time this month and I think that's part of the reason why I feel like I'm losing it. My Mom's best friend died after a 10 year battle with breast cancer. She was very very close to our family so I had to attend the funeral which hit me really hard. The day I landed at home for the visitation, my Grandmother was rushed to emergency surgery and has been in the critical care ward, the day I left my Uncle went into emerg. for chest pains. They're both doing ok now.

    My supervisor is also very very busy and hasn't really offered much advice, he tends to be out of the country a lot. I sent him my outline (which was basically a first draft in outline form) and he gave some feedback but I haven't been able to send him a draft and I'm getting afraid it will be too late at this point.

    So basically I feel completely overwhelmed. I'm at the point where all I want to do is pass but I've somehow convinced myself I'm going to fail even though I have a 3.85 GPA right now. I guess my question is, is this normal?
    Does everyone feel like they're going to completely choke and fail at the end?

    I just want this year to be over so I can go ride my bike again and join the real world! Thanks for any advice. I truly can't wait until I have time to ride and come on here more. (Have I said that already? )
    "Live, more than your neighbors. Unleash yourself upon the world and go places. Go now! Giggle. Know. Laugh. And bark the the moon like the wild dog that you are!" - Jon Blais

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
    Posts
    13,394
    Are there other professors or students in your program who can read your work for feedback? I generally have other students read my work (it's actually required in a lot of my courses) for both content and format.
    That said, I would trust your judgement of your own work. You have been successful so far, so I am sure you are on track! Yes, having the outside stress in your personal life may have added your stress about the paper, but since you have been successful in getting your first draft done, you will be able to do it.
    If your advisor can't help you, find someone else to give you feedback. You are almost done... hang in there and then go ride your bike!

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Location
    Good things gro-oh-ow in Ontario!
    Posts
    382
    Quote Originally Posted by Crankin View Post
    Are there other professors or students in your program who can read your work for feedback? I generally have other students read my work (it's actually required in a lot of my courses) for both content and format.
    That said, I would trust your judgement of your own work. You have been successful so far, so I am sure you are on track! Yes, having the outside stress in your personal life may have added your stress about the paper, but since you have been successful in getting your first draft done, you will be able to do it.
    If your advisor can't help you, find someone else to give you feedback. You are almost done... hang in there and then go ride your bike!
    I am going to send it to my professor anyway, I am just worried he is going to be too busy to look at it and then send me feedback about it needing major revisions at the last minute. Which will send me over the edge.

    I would send it to a classmate but I don't really know of anyone. The problem with my program, history, is that it is very solitary, especially at this school. The department does nothing to try and build solidarity for grad students. It's basically every man/woman for him/herself. It's ridiculous considering both of my roommates have had incredible support from their profs and departments.

    Thanks for the advice.
    "Live, more than your neighbors. Unleash yourself upon the world and go places. Go now! Giggle. Know. Laugh. And bark the the moon like the wild dog that you are!" - Jon Blais

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    1,372
    Quote Originally Posted by firenze11 View Post
    Hi everyone!


    So basically I feel completely overwhelmed. I'm at the point where all I want to do is pass but I've somehow convinced myself I'm going to fail even though I have a 3.85 GPA right now. I guess my question is, is this normal?
    Does everyone feel like they're going to completely choke and fail at the end?

    I just want this year to be over so I can go ride my bike again and join the real world! Thanks for any advice. I truly can't wait until I have time to ride and come on here more. (Have I said that already? )
    Yes!
    OMGosh, I remember the last 3 months of grad school and I get cold sweats. I had to defend my thesis - a 3 hr "meeting" with 4 professors, including my adviser, where they just asked me questions. After the meeting, the student is asked to stand in the hall while they discuss your performance over the past x years to get here, your work, etc, and decide if you've passed or not.
    I didn't even know I was doing it, but apparently I stood in the hall and cried. My adviser came out, looked at me quizzically and asked "you passed?".
    That confused me until he finished with "you can stop crying now?" and I realized his questioning came from not quite knowing what to do with a crying student, that his statements were statement, not questions.
    My tears weren't even fear or disappointment, it was just all that stress came to a head while standing there.
    It sounds like you are on the right track and in the home stretch. My best advice to you is to go for a bike ride! Or to yoga, or something where you can get some air and breath.
    I'm not even going to tell you good luck, you don't need it, you'll do fine.
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  5. #5
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    Indianapolis, IN
    Posts
    1,033
    As someone who's about to walk that same path, the grad school nightmare, I feel your pain. Many of my friends have already went through grad school or are going through it currently and the anxiety is very normal. I expect I will have a total meltdown at some point too. Don't be too hard on yourself, grad school is designed to test your limits not necessarily how academically bright you are. They intentionally stress grad students to make sure we can hack it in the real world. If you have a 3.85 then you are apparently dealing with it better than you realize. Maybe consider getting a bike to ride to de-stress occasionally. Hang in there it will get better I'm told.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Between the Blue Ridge and the Chesapeake Bay
    Posts
    5,203
    What everyone else said, PLUS...if you are really having a hard time, there's no shame in taking more time to finish the paper. I took an extra three months to finish one of mine. I graduated in August instead of May, but who cares? Just don't put it off indefinitely. Best of luck to you!

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Location
    Good things gro-oh-ow in Ontario!
    Posts
    382
    Thank you so much. I'm glad this is normal and I'm not crazy, even if I feel like it.

    WindingRoad You're right about grad school not necessarily being about how bright you are. I think it's much more about perseverance and stamina than all out intelligence.

    TSpoet I can definitely see myself doing something like that. Luckily I'm in a non-thesis program so I don't have to defend, but I've had a couple of days in the past two weeks where I burst into tears and I couldn't figure out if it was school stress or personal stress (or all of it mixed together)

    Syndirelah Thanks. I think you're right about not getting emotional about school work. I'll just continue plugging away at it, one step at a time, I guess I'm closer to the end everyday.

    Tulip This is actually my second go at this MA, so I have kind of delayed the process already. I originally came here right after undergrad and got sick. I was having horrible headaches and I tried to work through them but got some weird tests back from the doctor and had to wait 6 months for an MRI of my brain--the stress of worrying about what was wrong plus doing school was too much for me so I quit after first semester and came back a year later. I'm ok now, I was just having really frequent migraines but it was scary at the time.

    I'm at the point where I don't want to take any more time and delay it longer which is probably another pressure I've added on myself. You're right though, there's no shame in delaying or taking more time to finish it.

    I'm going to do a read through of my conclusion and send it off to my prof now. Do they give profs classes in how the strike the fear of God into their students?

    Thanks again, hearing everyone's experiences and advice is really really helping me.
    "Live, more than your neighbors. Unleash yourself upon the world and go places. Go now! Giggle. Know. Laugh. And bark the the moon like the wild dog that you are!" - Jon Blais

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Between the Blue Ridge and the Chesapeake Bay
    Posts
    5,203
    Another thing, and it may not apply at all, but in both of my programs we had an adviser, but also a committee, so it just wasn't up to one person to guide us. I take it this is not the case with you, which is a shame. Any chance you can either get a backup/assistant adviser?

    And remember, IT DOES NOT HAVE TO BE PERFECT. It only has to be good enough. 10 years out from my Masters thesi (Type A--I did 2 simultaneously but I've chilled out considerably since then), NO ONE CARES about it. Not me, not my job (none of my jobs I've had in the past 10 years), and certainly not my advisers!

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    Santa Cruz mountains
    Posts
    217
    Quote Originally Posted by firenze11 View Post
    WindingRoad You're right about grad school not necessarily being about how bright you are. I think it's much more about perseverance and stamina than all out intelligence.
    I would have called it stubbornness, that's what kept me going.

    Quote Originally Posted by firenze11 View Post
    I'm going to do a read through of my conclusion and send it off to my prof now. Do they give profs classes in how the strike the fear of God into their students?
    No, but they don't usually give them classes on how to be a good teacher, mentor, and/or communicator.

 

 

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