Thousands of people have successfully made the transition from academia — whether as graduate students, postdocs, adjuncts, tenure-line faculty, or tenured faculty — to lives and careers outside the ivory tower.
What do you do after tenure?
It’s not often you hear stories about people transitioning out of academia after they’ve already received tenure. It’s easy to attribute that to job security, to the satisfaction of hitting the pinnacle of a career, and to simple career success.
The reality is that tenure can act like a pair of golden handcuffs. You’ve got job security – why risk doing something else? You’ve already sunk the better part of decades into this career – how could you possibly start over? What will your colleagues think? What else could you possibly do?
The flip side of job security
Last week, Inside Higher Ed profiled Ann Daly, a former tenured women’s studies professor from the University of Texas turned women’s coach. Why did she leave?
I was dissatisfied and bored for a long, long time before I made my escape. My reasons were several. First, academia wasn’t a good fit for me. I’m a high-autonomy person, and my university had become increasingly bureaucratic and committee-obsessed over the years. Second, my foundational intellectual questions about women and culture were leading me outside into the “real world.” Third, I got bored in such a static environment. Seventeen years is a long time to be teaching the same thing in the same classroom and discussing the same problems in the same faculty meeting room. Fourth, I wanted to develop new capacities. The supreme irony is that my core desire, to constantly learn and grow, was thwarted within the very cultural institution that is supposed to advance learning.
In short, the reality of professoring, in her experience, didn’t live up to the reasons she had gone into academia. So she took that passion for women, that interest in learning, and turned it in a new direction.
Could her experience have been yours?
When a job market like this one hits, when no one is getting full-time jobs because there are almost none to be had, it’s easy to blame ourselves – we didn’t prepare enough, we didn’t do enough, we didn’t know enough. And it’s equally easy to hold up the job we didn’t get as the perfect career fantasy: If I had gotten that job, I would be totally content in all ways.
But consider, for just a minute, the possibility that you might have had an experience like Daly’s. Consider the possibility that you would have found being a faculty member ill-fitting – the endless committee meetings, trapped for decades with the same colleagues, teaching the same classes over and over again.
Now consider the possibility that you can take all of your passion for your subject, all of your curiosity, and all of your skills at learning something and turn it into a completely different career, one that might actually fit your personality better.
It really is possible
Academia, however lovely it is for those for whom it is right, is not the right place for all of us. It’s not even the best place for all of us. And that’s okay.
There’s a big wide world out there, and even though that, in and of itself, can be kind of scary, it means that there are more possibilities than you can dream of right now. There’s something out there for you, even if you don’t know what it is yet.
If nothing else, Daly’s experience tells us this: Even when the thread of your calling and your passion is constant, it might very well lead you into more than one career. We humans thrive on learning and challenge, and following our passions into new learnings and new challenges can take us outside of the boxes society likes to keep people in. And that’s okay.
Our job, the only one that matters, is to keep showing up, to keep noticing what draws us, and to keep thinking about how to arrange that to pay the rent. Because more often than you’d suspect, your passion really can support you.
Anthea says
Ahh..thank you for making some comments about this article. I saw it in the Chronicle too.
Anthea´s last blog post ..Food for the Mind