Emily writes about the pressures during her dissertation and how she dealt with them whilst having ongoing stress and anxiety.
- Emily Smale
First term of third year, and it was looming over all of us.
Dissertation. I had known the subject I wanted to look into for months, but
what I wanted to find out was still a puzzle to me. During dissertation
seminars I would hear people discussing their ideas, the literature they had
already researched and the questions they had drafted. I felt so behind.
Of course, adding on to the stress was our first two
assignments of third year. Progressing to Plymouth for my final year from a
partner college was challenging. Just before Christmas I made myself physically
ill with anxiety. I was juggling two massive assignments and the planning of my
dissertation right before the Christmas break. For weeks I was constantly
waking up with stress headaches, I would lie in bed and feel my chest
tightening as I tried to go through everything I had to do, in such little
time.
I finally got my ethical approval 5 days before Christmas. I
was so fearful that it was going to take me months to write it up; I rushed
into finding a school, receiving permission and planning my methodology all
before the middle of January. I spent most of my Christmas break suffering from
constant worry and panic attacks. I was not juggling the pressure of third year
well, at all.
After Christmas break, I came to the realisation that
everybody else was miles behind me. I was the only one in my research seminar
that had been to collect my data. Some hadn’t received ethical feedback. It was
at this moment I realised how much my worry had gotten to me. Being away from
university for so long at a time (Long-distance learner), I lost communication
from so many. I assumed that everybody was much further along than me, but they
weren’t. I took the time I had at uni to talk through my worries and my ideas
with my dissertation tutor.
As time progressed, the tightness in my chest, the pain in
my head and the butterflies in my stomach surpassed. It became occasional that
I would lie in bed worried about the pressure, as I had three months to write
up my data. However, I then got complacent, and pushed the writing up of my
findings to the back of my priorities. When deadline month was becoming closer,
I decided to write up a schedule for each week with what I had to write, what I should write
and what I could write if I had
time. I would only let myself panic if I hadn’t gotten around to completing my “had”
list for the day. Eventually, submission day arrived and 8,500 words later I
was finished.
My advice is; never isolate yourself in times of
worry and stress. Keep on with your dissertation tutor if you’re worried about
time, keep yourself talking through with friends about ideas and questions. If
you have sleepless nights, occupy your mind. It’s okay to not be doing it
everyday. Trying to force yourself to write when your brain just isn’t ready
will be a waste of time and energy. Taking breaks during writing and occupying
your mind with something else, will really, really help. I would wake up super
early and try to get stuff done so that I had the rest of the day ahead of me,
but I soon learnt that I worked best later in the day/night. It’s not always
going to be easy, but having a healthy balance between writing and taking
breaks is the best way forward.
For more information on how to find support, click here.
For more information on how to deal with stress during studies, click here.
Wow, great post.
ReplyDelete