The thane of Cawdor lives. Why do you dress me In borrowed robes? 鈥 Macbeth
I really didn鈥檛 think that the very pointy end of my PhD, once I knew that my thesis amendments had been approved by my supervisors, would be complex. Surely there would be a quiet moment of joy followed by the pop of a champagne cork? Well, I was right about the champagne, but the last week has been more of a roller coaster than I imagined. It turns out that finishing a doctorate is wound up in some messy identity-entangled feelings. Here, I try to give a sense of what that looked and felt like for me.
My week鈥檚 diary of PhD completion went something like this:
Friday: Supervisors sign off on the amended thesis. Form goes to the dean for university sign-off. Elation. Excitement. Light can be seen at the end of the tunnel. Hugs. Champagne. I tell my kids. My 5-year-old shouts 鈥淲ooohooo! No more PhD!鈥 I remember that I鈥檝e been doing this most of their lives (they were six months and two years old when I started; now they are 4 and 5).
探花视频
Saturday and Sunday: Checking and rechecking the thesis, especially the amendments. I fully proof the first and last chapters, line by line, punctuation mark by punctuation mark. Obsess over commas and hyphens, or the lack of commas and hyphens. Wonder why I鈥檓 so unable to let go of a document that I鈥檝e been told is done. My husband takes me to lunch on the coast on a glorious day.聽I drink a Bellini. We 鈥渃heers鈥 to the thesis being done.
Monday: Dean signs off on my thesis. It鈥檚 through. Accepted. Officially done.聽I jump up and down. Whooping. Air-punching. Triumph.
探花视频
Tuesday: I鈥檓 still tinkering with the already-approved thesis. I鈥檓 haunted by nightmares and daydreams of mistakes existing somewhere in the 300-page document despite it being checked by me, two supervisors and three examiners. Impossible obsession with checking over and over. And over. I keep reminding myself the thesis has been signed off. It is considered doctorate-worthy. I save the document as a PDF to stop myself from my compulsive tinkering. I sneak another peek. OK, maybe more than one.
Wednesday: Wake with a cracking headache, knowing that today is the day I print the final final final copies for permanent binding (buckram cloth! gold letters!).聽One will live on the library shelf (maybe never to be opened).聽Anxiety builds as I worry that this final copy means there can be no more tinkering. I am overwhelmed by the pressure of printing the tangible final pages.聽It鈥檚 a relinquishing of control. If there are errors, they will be inked聽there for eternity. I feel increasingly ill as I print and check the final copies of my thesis. I take the聽box of printed pages in to the university and submit them to the library to be sent for final binding. I drive to pick up sick child from school; no time to savour the moment. I upload the thesis document to the university library. Fall into a heap of exhaustion and hollowness. It鈥檚 the thesis finishing comedown, an emotional and energetic crumbling, a descent into the post-thesis abyss. I tweet my feelings of emptiness and strangeness. Responses come: yes, the mourning, the crash, the void. Others have felt this, too. I head out for dinner and champagne. Company helps and I鈥檓 reminded that 鈥 without lab partners, a writing group or colleagues at the university 鈥 my journey is mostly in my head. I鈥檝e been the working mama who comes and goes from uni in a blinding flash, working聽mostly alone,聽often聽in the night.聽It鈥檚 good to be out, and to talk about it. And to talk about other things to forget about it.
Thursday: I get word that . There it is, a citation with my name on it, and a downloadable document. My thesis title in black and white. My words out of my head and into the world. My work now in the public realm. Elation again. Pride. And then the crack of the imposter syndrome whip. I hadn鈥檛 felt it until now. I was perfectly comfortable being a PhD candidate. An eager聽student. A work in progress. Of course, I am still a neophyte. A partially-formed apprentice scholar. I realise I鈥檓 almost doctored, but feel unworthy of the title. I know I鈥檝e worked hard for this. My family has both sacrificed and benefited from my doing the PhD; we鈥檝e lived it. I know I鈥檝e walked the path that leads to the 鈥淒r鈥 and the medieval flourish of the Tudor bonnet. Yet I hear Macbeth鈥檚 line in my head: 鈥淲hy do you dress me in borrowed robes?鈥 My sense of identity hasn鈥檛 caught up with the reality of finishing the PhD. My new almost-doctor-ness feels ill-fitting. My is coming to an end. Or is that a beginning? When I started the doctorate, I saw its completion as the pinnacle. Now I realise it鈥檚 entry level.
Friday: I notice missing Oxford commas in the text. I begin to think about the work I鈥檝e now projected out into the world. I remember how non-traditional my thesis is. That . That some might be inspired by my novel approach and others bemused or horrified. I reflect on how I have attempted to push at the boundaries of what an acceptable thesis is. I鈥檝e worked within the accepted parameters of a thesis (introduction, literature, method, results, discussion; some use of the聽distant academic voice). But I鈥檝e also challenged the traditional thesis genre by . I wonder how my attempt to create a text that compels and propels the reader will be received now that it lives outside of my laptop and my head. I鈥檓 comforted by accepted journal articles and conference papers that affirm that my work fits somewhere. I breathe.
探花视频
The ride continues. Maybe soon, I鈥檒l grow into the robes.
Deborah Netolicky is a teacher of English and literature at an Australian school, where she also leads a coaching intervention for teacher growth. She studied for her PhD 鈥 Down the rabbit hole: Professional identities, professional learning, and change in one Australian school 鈥 at Murdoch University. Her thesis was completed this month and her doctorate will be conferred in April. This originally appeared on her .
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