In our new "how can we help you?" thread, a reader writes:
In conversations with a significant other who is not in academia, how do you help them understand that deciding to leave the academic job market is not 'giving up?'
More specifically, how might one communicate to their partner that their relatively stable non TT position is actually quite good, all things considered?
To an outsider, it seems as though someone who put in 7 years for a PhD only to decide they no longer want to pursue TT positions is somehow akin 'giving up on one's dream' and that remaining in a non-TT position is somehow just 'settling.' I struggle to help them understand that these kinds of phrases and this general framework are simply not as applicable here.
And I ask this sincerely, so responses like 'there's no jobs' or 'its soul-crushing' are not especially helpful.
So please, serious responses only.
These are really good questions. My spouse and I had a number of somewhat similar discussions during my time on the market. I didn't have the option of staying in a stable non-TT position, so in my case the discussions were about whether to leave academia altogether. But anyway, here are a few thoughts…
My own experience is that just being honest can be the way to go. As the OP notes regarding concerns about 'giving up one's dream' and 'settling', in their view they don't think these kinds of phrases are applicable here. So maybe the thing to do is to explain why they don't regard long-term non-TT work as settling. As they note, many of these positions can be quite good and not all that different than TT jobs. At my university, for instance, the real differences are no tenure, a higher course load, and merit raise and promotion decisions being based upon teaching (rather than teaching, service, and research). So, if your real dream has been to teach philosophy (in a fairly well-paying full-time job), maybe the thing to say is that this is more attractive to you than trying to get a TT job. Finally, maybe another thing to say here is that your real dream is to be able to teach full-time at a university and have a good quality of life, such as being able to spend time with family, spend time with friends and hobbies, live in a good area, and so on. Many of us know all too well that staying on the market and getting a TT job can be inimical to that. The job-market can perpetually undermine a happy day-to-day life, and if you end up on the tenure track you have to endure six more years of pressure–the kind of pressure that can lead you to be constantly stressed, work all the time, not enjoy life, and so on.
But these are just my thoughts. What are yours, particularly those of you who have had these kinds of conversations with loved ones and significant others?
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