On chronic illness, disclosure and Impostor Syndrome

On chronic illness, disclosure and Impostor Syndrome

(Or, Maybe somebody ought to do something about those effing sharks….)

Much has been written about science and the Impostor Syndrome by people more eloquent than I. Much less has been written about the challenges of facing a chronic illness while being a scientist. I have some thoughts about both. Also, sharks (of the metaphorical inclination.)

I was diagnosed with a medical condition about half-way through grad school. I won’t unpack that story here but suffice to say the condition (which I will refer to henceforth as ‘SFMC’ – as in Stupid F’n Medical Condition) is chronic, intermittent and usually progressive. It lasts a lifetime and can result in fairly severe disability. Due to the circumstances of my diagnosis, disclosure during grad school wasn’t really an issue of choice. I’m happy to say that people in my academic circle were very supportive and actively helpful, including my PI and other people I looked up to as mentors.

In spite of the potential long term ramifications of said SFMC, nobody told me that I should consider leaving science. I’m glad for that. It would have crushed me. But then, I really didn’t get much in the way of advice beyond the standard ‘advice for grad students.’ The topic of long-term illness was one that seemed to generally befuddle people.[I] The main piece of situation-specific advice I was given was that moving forward in my career I should be very careful about disclosing my SFMC. This advice echoed from every corner I tilted an ear to. I heard it from mentors, from family in academia and from people I didn’t know but reached out to because it seemed like they had solid perspectives on academic careers. It was an amazing show of unanimity – Seriously, you try getting that many academic types to agree on a single issue! And when I thought about it at the time, it seemed completely sensible.

Assuming my goal is a tenure track position, do I really want the fact that I have this thing out there? Even in the best case scenarios, it places an asterisk over my future that committees looking to hire people into lifelong positions might take note of. Probably a silent note, possibly even a subconscious one, but the cold fact is that no one has to tell you why you didn’t get the job, especially amid a glut of qualified applicants.[II] And manifestations of consequence could be more subtle than simply not getting hired. One academic I spoke with noted that colleagues in positions of power might hold back advancement opportunities because they ‘don’t want to stress you out with extra work.’ In the politics of academia, such a decision could be well-intended or it could be nefarious. But in the end, it wouldn’t matter. An opportunity missed is an opportunity missed. I look back at nearly a decade of work shaped by chance opportunities and shudder at the notion.

I generally don’t like talking about my health at work so limiting disclosure as much as possible seemed like advice that would be easy to take.

And of course, I was terribly, terribly wrong. What follows is the post-mortem…

I decided to use my PD position as a testing ground for my new disclosure-free life. I duly noted the SFMC on required medical forms, using as few letters as possible. “Dx’d ‘X’ ‘0X” That was it. My symptoms were usually invisible and largely indistinguishable from the maladies that plague every postdoc. Hand not working? Repetitive stress. Fatigue? Tell it to the postdoc who’s just added child number two to the family. Stressed about uncertainties? Right now you’d have to be crazy not to. And so forth.
But then, as it is wont to do, life happened. The SFMC behaved as advertised. My science began to slow down. My stress crept up. My casual non-disclosure gradually morphed into something that felt like a dark secret. And then my self-confidence cratered while anger at pretty much everything began to rise.

I held out a year and a half before I broke and told my PI.[III] I didn’t want to feel as though I was making excuses. I didn’t apologize, I held back the urge to cry as much as I could. I tried to be as rational as possible. And now that it’s done, I can sincerely report that my PI and every other person I’ve talked to about it since have been nothing but supportive, both emotionally and substantively, even as the emotional turmoil of the whole ordeal slammed me even deeper into anger and depression.

Wait, what?

Yes. As much as I’d hoped disclosure would offer some, well, closure, it didn’t. It turns out, it wasn’t just the stress of hiding a secret that had been making me miserable. It wasn’t fear that I’d lose my job or anger my PI. Somewhere along the way I’d internalized something ugly, and I’ve been picking at threads to unravel what it is ever since.

I’ve never thought of myself as a particularly fragile person. I’ve always worked fairly independently and I put up with some weapons-grade BS drama in my early career. So what went so wrong, what made this year and a half so miserable, and the misery so persistent? Why did this self-doubt suddenly creep into and finally saturate my psyche? Enter Impostor Syndrome, the feeling that one is fooling people with respect to her or his competence, intelligence or qualifications.[IV] The sense that one is a fraud, living in fear of what seems like an inevitable discovery. Having a secret SFMC is sort of like that. The real awfulness happens if you let the two start to bleed together. Two awful tastes that taste absolutely gawdawful together. Imagine that you’re suffering from Impostor Syndrome, fighting back the feelings that you’re hiding a secret that disqualifies you from career advancement and makes you somehow worth less than your peers. Now imagine every single person you respect, every person you turn to for career advice nodding and saying ‘Yes. That’s basically true.” Gah! Okay, stop imagining it, and never start again.

Because of course, that’s not at all what anyone giving me advice to not disclose meant. And most have been quick to say that the decision is entirely up to me, and that if I found I was uncomfortable with the situation that I should do something about it. (Which I did! Eventually.) The point of this post isn’t to say “Hey! That advice sucked!” My point here is to illuminate the unintended consequences of hearing these things as a heads-up to anyone else who might be in a similar situation. Particularly junior scientists, who’ve had the least amount of time to build up their confidence and prove their competence. Hey guys, don’t do what I just did! If you find yourself thinking that you’re ‘broken goods” because of anything…step back and reasses.

Finally, I want to turn the spotlight around and shine a light back at the shadows, into the waters, at the real problem. (Getting to the metaphorical sharks…)

Now that I look back, it’s hard not to hear the jarring strain of unwelcomeness in what were friendly and well-meaning words. An unwelcomeness not intended but warned of. Here there be sharks, so try not to bleed too much. It may be solid advice in an unfair world, but it’s also a tacit admission that there is little support in science for those facing external challenges. If somebody came to his or her PI and spoke about their sexual orientation and the PI’s response was “Well, you better hide that if you want to succeed…” it would be clear that there was a problem. But, depending on where you were sitting, it might not be so clear where the problem lies. What I’ve learned from all of this is that when you’re the one being told to hide something, it’s difficult not to feel like the problem is you. Somehow Here there be sharks becomes Sorry, you’re chum.

In the end, I’ve discovered that while I don’t particularly like talking about my health, keeping it secret exacted a toll I didn’t expect. I’ve discovered a network of kind and supportive people (I’ve been lucky. I don’t doubt that there are sharks out there somewhere.) I’ve recognized that I let the SFMC get tangled up with my confidence, and somehow started blaming myself for a problem intrinsic to the career. And, depressingly, I’ve realized that the stigma of medical issues is still so bad that people feel comfortable saying that the best course of advice is to hide them.

I’d end this slightly tortured aquatic metaphor by saying we need to fix this, we need to acknowledge and go after the effing sharks, capped with the obligatory “We’re gonna need a bigger boat.”[V] But I don’t think that’s quite right yet. So I’ll end with what feels more appropriate.

First, we’re gonna need a boat.

-shademar (formerly rylie)

[Image by Flickr user gaftels used under creative commons licensing.]

On choosing a hill to die on

What’s your career breakpoint? Is there a line you won’t, you can’t cross?

Some of these lines are blindingly stark, obvious and ethical in nature. Depressingly, some people cross them anyways because there isn’t room for failure, for negative results or for risky yet time consuming experimentation. We have to succeed. The question is how much ethical flexibility people derive from “have to.” …But frauds be frauding. Let’s leave aside the egregious realm of nudging, fudging and fabricating ‘n’ and ‘p’ and tear our horrified gazes away from the carnage. Do you have a ‘fuck this, I’m out.” threshold? Have you thought about it, what it might be?

I found mine. When the notion of doing a second postdoc (not yet 2 years into my first) first came up, I smiled weakly and tried to game out the merits. I’m in a strange situation after all. There is no malleability, no forgiveness in the postdoctoral timeline where I am. It is stretched taut between a concrete start date and a brutal, inexorable enddate. And of course, you have to find a job before that enddate. So you have to get one of the few grants you can apply for (K99-R00) and really have your project wrapped up in 3.5 to 4 years. So 1.7 years in and I’m sitting on a pile of data that I think looks promising (hell, maybe even exciting) but somehow I’m still failing.

My personal calculations are ugly and confounded by factors I can’t change. But time, health and sanity are finite resources for everyone, and we all have our unspoken burdons.

I made it through the conversation nodding gamely and then went and locked myself in the disconcertingly warm darkness of the microscope room with a pile of sodden kimwipes and mascara that would survive a firehose (I seldom wear makeup but when I do, I make damn sure it isn’t going anywhere if my day takes a turn towards the verklempt.)

I’ve come to realize that this is my threshold. My own personal “fuck it I’m out” threshold. For my unique situation. I told my PI this (I’d love to say that I marched into his office and declared it in a clear and strong voice but I’ve already admitted to leaving wadded up tear-soaked kimwipes in dark places. It’s enough to say I didn’t cry, not when talking with him, or at least not much. That’s a victory for me. Obviously I love my job.)

So this it it. The hill I die (or succeed) on. I’m okay with that.