On the slow return from the long vacation, as a community,
we academics find ourselves in a bit of a post-referendum pickle (I think it is
a reasonable
assumption that most academics were anti-Brexit).
Put aside the shock that “not
everyone thinks like us”. Regardless of the final outcome of Brexiting, we
are in for a time of uncertainty. We can face this uncertainty in two ways:
hand-wringing pessimism or fatalistic optimism. In private, I find myself
swinging between these viewpoints; but in public, I take on the role of
departmental pessimism-eater: for every “woe is us” I respond with “it’ll be
OK”; for every cloud a silver lining and for every hand-wring a cheery
backslap.
I admit this Pollyanna approach can be quite annoying.
Reasons not to be miserable
The silver linings feel few and far between. However, I take
hope from the following:
- Thirteen non-European Union nations, through one mechanism or another, can access Horizon 2020 funding, suggesting that it will be possible for the UK, too
- At present, due to government imposed restrictions, we are basically limited to recruiting from within the EU. In the future, employing non-EU nationals may become easier, broadening the talent pool
- The arguments for and against the EU were tight, and while to us Remain felt like the least bad option, not everyone voting Leave was a frothing-at-the-mouth Little Englander
- The pound diving means that grants won in foreign currencies are now worth more, and a possible reduction in house prices and interest rates may allow “generation rent” to get on the property ladder (provided that they haven’t spent their deposit money on Poké Balls).
Ultimately, in the months since the referendum, unless you
are a politician, nothing has actually changed: Blackshirts have not been marching
in Whitechapel, countries in the EU still need to sell us cheese, wine and fast
cars, and as far as I can tell the stock market is at exactly the same place as
it was a year ago.
Things can only get worse
Of course all of the above may be bollocks, and Brexit
should be seen as another contributory factor to the inevitable decline of
British universities. For example, economic uncertainty may affect medium to
long-term investment, some British-based scientists have
been dropped from Horizon 2020 projects, the economy has slowed down
prompting the record low interest rates, and the rhetoric from some EU
politicians has been fairly acerbic, prompting fears that the exit process will
not be pain-free.
You no doubt have your own personal favourite reason that we
are all DOOMED, but I believe that optimism can break the debilitating miasma
of gloom (perpetuated by social media) that is hanging over the ivory tower.
Critically, our happiness is – mostly – under our control,
we can become more happy by doing more of the things that make us happy
(reading, exercising, enjoying our jobs, pausing to notice the little things).
Moping around, blaming the government/anyone who voted Leave/Donald Trump for
all that ails you is, a bit like fast food, satisfying in the short term, but
leaves you bloated and sad.
But don’t just take my word for it; TED talks are littered
with talks about the value of positive
psychology.
The wind in academia doesn’t blow, it sucks
This optimistic mindset extends beyond the current crise
du jour and is a core skill for a better, happier, more productive career.
Academia is characterised by a string of events over which
we have little control: student expectations, student realities, grant panels,
peer reviews, promotions boards, Tory governments, global recessions, equipment
not working, experiments not working, students not working, the lack of a tea
room on campus and exponential increases in teaching load because in a moment
of weakness you said yes to a pleading colleague.
You can throw your hands in the air, say “this is all shit”
and run the clock down to retirement on your ever-decreasing pension pot.
Or you can brush yourself off and start again.
Best foot forward
Do not let each negative comment eat away at you and become embittered.
Although tempting, especially when reviewing too soon after your own work has
been rejected, poisoning the well for others with angry reviews, adding to a
vicious cycle of rejection and recrimination, ends up making life terrible for
everyone.
If you are not concerned with the general mental well-being
of the body académique, there is a more selfish reason to be optimistic:
pessimism directly affects your ability to succeed. Simplistically, you will
never get funded if you don’t apply for grants because “no one ever gets
funded”.
But additionally, if you don’t believe in a grant or paper,
then why would the reviewer? So, cheer up. It’s a new academic year after all,
and we have just had eight blessed weeks with no students to fix all the things
that they have broken, catch up on all the paperwork they have generated, and
maybe squeeze in some uninterrupted thought before the next intake.
Finally, don’t mourn, organise
I want to clarify something here.
I am not endorsing accepting the current state of affairs
and doing nothing. Get out there and do something, anything: join a political
party, write to your MP, contact
the Commons Science and Technology Committee, demand that your professional
body canvases Parliament, take to the streets and engage with others.
I am, however, endorsing a mindset to deal with the state
that we are in. Look for the positives in the situation and do not let things
that are out of your control affect your ability to manage the things that are
in your control. To paraphrase Reinhold Niebuhr: “Have the strength to accept
the things you cannot change, the courage to change the things you can, and the
wisdom to tell the difference”.
This article first appeared in the Times Higher Education on 1st September 2016
This article first appeared in the Times Higher Education on 1st September 2016
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