In my first year of graduate school, I shared an office with a woman who was completing the final chapter of her dissertation. From the looks of it, we were an odd couple. The posters on my wall were middlebrow and unframed, while her side was tastefully decorated with framed prints by local artists. My desk was an endless pile of magazines and textbooks, interoffice envelopes, and papers in various stages of evaluation. Her desk was clean. I recall a pastel canister full of pens and pencils, a framed photograph of her husband and their child, an appointment book.
In spite of all that organization, she was obviously well liked. She was conversational with her students. I would come back from teaching, and the office would be full of her friends, indulging in idle chatter about what happened on last night's American Idol or mourning how Buffy the Vampire Slayer had "jumped the shark." When the office was quieter, we would joke about the bitter coffee in the vending machine and about the department photocopier, which refused to die. But something happened in one of those quiet moments that made me avoid my office-mate for the rest of the year. I almost withdrew from the program, packed my bags, and moved back home. It was the first time I questioned what I was doing in graduate school; since then, I've found myself repeatedly asking, What does graduate school do to people?
At midsemester I asked my office-mate a question about a professor in her field. He was offering a class that allowed me to fulfill a requirement. Did she think the class would be a good one for me to take? I expected a quick answer. Instead she asked me to close the door.
As soon as the bolt clicked into the jamb, my colleague opened up a side drawer of her desk and flipped through some files. She produced a single sheet of paper and set it near her appointment book. Looking at me and pointing to the paper, she said calmly, "He's against me."
She handed me the paper. "Look for yourself," she said.
A line down the length of the paper divided it into two equal columns. The left column was entitled "Faculty For Me," and the right column entitled "Faculty Against Me." Skimming the page, I saw that every faculty member—almost 40 people—in our department was on the list. Several of the names in the "Against" column were annotated:
"Makes students wash his car."
"Thinks she's a feminist!"
"Would not accept late seminar paper."
"LOVES being CHAIR!"
The names and annotations were in various colored inks —this was a list that she had been keeping for quite some time. Some of the names had been carefully crossed off one column and moved to the other. One name moved back and forth between "For" and "Against" several times, all the way down the page. The name of the professor I had inquired about was near the top of the "Against" column: apparently an early entry. His name did not switch columns. There was no annotation to explain.
I read through the list again and stared at it, trying to figure out how best to respond. At first, I must admit, I felt a bit of pride in being trusted with such insider knowledge. But what was the knowledge I had been given? The annotations were a mix of legitimate concerns, opinions, and sometimes ill-founded anxieties; at some point, the differences among them ceased to matter. In spite of the variety of inks my colleague had used to maintain the list, the picture presented was startlingly black and white. Names detached from their owners, they ceased to have complexities and contradictions. The people on that list never made a mistake or committed a transgression they later came to regret. They were either friend or foe. The faculty had been judged.
I looked up from the paper, expecting a knowing smile. But she had not waited for me to react, to gauge my opinion of her list. She was reviewing the short story she had assigned to her afternoon class. I read what I could see of her face. There was concentration but no anger. She seemed calm, and not the eerie calm of a person about to boil over with rage. I tried to recall moments when she may have expressed cynicism or announced that a conspiracy was out to get her. I remembered a few unkind words about the ancillary member of her dissertation committee, but they were just that: unkind and nothing more.
I set the paper on her desk as she continued to prepare for class, and she placed it back in the folder as if it were any other document that properly belonged there. I walked back to my messy desk, opened a book, and stared into it for a while. I asked myself a question that I could not answer: What could have turned a model graduate student, a dedicated writer, a friendly, well-liked person, a caring mother—someone completely normal—into someone so utterly paranoid?
Even now, several years later, I can't answer that question. Perhaps it's not fair of me to call her paranoid. I know now that if I had studied the list more carefully, I could have avoided some of the pitfalls I ran into during the course of my graduate education. It could be that my officemate was a shrewd but unsubtle observer, good for remembering her foes and allies, bad for writing them down. But what remains unnerving to me is that the list of "Faculty For Me" and "Faculty Against Me" was so unremarkable to her. Aside from asking me to close the door, she displayed no sense of drama in showing me the list. Showing me her list did not make me a confidante. To her it was just a reference sheet, the sort of thing one keeps in a desk drawer along with office memos, paper clips, tape, and loose change.
We all know that graduate school is competitive. We also know that some faculty members play on the insecurities bred by that competition. But some don't, which is not to say that such faculty members are good souls, but they're also not fiendish devils. In other words, they are people. Yet in the "family romance" of graduate school, faculty members are seen by students as being so awesome that everything they do becomes meaningful—and strangely relevant to a graduate student's life, even if it's not relevant at all. What felt like paranoia to me was, by the final stage of her dissertation, second nature to my officemate. Graduate students are often so used to living with their paranoia that it is becomes banal—instinctual, invisible.
I imagine that my officemate is not alone in keeping lists, mental or written. That possibility frightened me then, and now.
At the end of my first year, my colleague successfully defended her dissertation and was immediately hired by a state university. Her department has a graduate program, and though it's a small one, I assume she has students of her own to advise.
I hope that she doesn't keep a list anymore, that she doesn't feel a need to. But I also hope that she remembers the time in her life when she considered it unremarkable to have an annotated list of friends and foes in her desk drawer. I hope she remembers, so that she refrains, as much as she can, from those errant ways she so carefully observed and meticulously documented in others. I hope she remembers, so that she doesn't drive her own students to such banal paranoia.






Comments
1. 11179102 - November 23, 2009 at 07:52 am
Dear Mr./Ms. Anonymous, thank you for sharing your "I lost my academic virginity" moment and welcome to the real world of graduate education. Your officemate wasn't paranoid, just realistically navigating the journey to her Ph.D. amidst departmental politics and tenured faculty who held his/her future in their hands. I hope your disertation is going as well.
2. 22228715 - November 23, 2009 at 08:41 am
Gotta disagree with the first commenter. No, that's creepy and over-the-top. I remember the incessant observation, discussion, and interpretation of our faculty when I was a doc student, and I even try to help nudge the conversation to healthier points when I return and talk with those still pre-defense (it's so much more obviously odd when you've left it!) But the two-column list is a sign of a petty nature or an oversimplified thinking process (not to mention that the defining personality characteristic of the individuals was their orientation to her!) Indeed, if she was only able to come up with two categories, she probably had a poor grasp of human nature, and was doing a pretty weak job of realistically navigating her journey to her Ph.D., but more importantly, the business of navigating among colleagues in her field for decades to come.
3. 22058885 - November 23, 2009 at 09:56 am
Wow! I don't know if it's a discipline thing, or just because I'm old, but when I was a graduate student in chemistry some 35 years ago, I never heard of such a thing. We (the grad students) talked about professors in terms of how difficult/easy their courses were, how many hours they expected their students to spend in the lab each week, who was a jerk and who was a nice guy (all guys back then). But I never heard a fellow grad student talk in terms of whether a certain professor was "for me" or "against me" as an individual. Just seems wierd.
4. laro1470 - November 23, 2009 at 10:11 am
How odd that only 2 graduate students were in that office. At our campus 10 people share the 5 desks in the office. So being housed with someone with paranoia is many times more likely here. FML
5. 22108469 - November 23, 2009 at 11:59 am
I think the paranoid list-keeper has chosen the right profession. Academia is the best place for people who are sovereign realms unto themselves.
6. natemawdur - November 23, 2009 at 12:43 pm
I'm not in any position to weigh in on whether or not your officemate was acting realistically or irrationally, yet I can't help but ask if this if the 'cautious/paranoid' mindset is unique to academia. Isn't it just as easy to imagine this scenario between two law students or two med students, or for that matter between two attorneys at a firm, two doctors at a hospital or virutally any situation where people associate with some professional goal? I might be missing the point, but insecurity and competitiveness are an unfortunate part of life, and the idea that they are uniquely symptomatic of graduate study just seems to further wall off the university from the mundane, practical (sigh) outside world. For my money, I am just as uneasy at the thought of your colleage advising students as I am at the idea of her treating patients or processing my tax returns!
7. 11179102 - November 23, 2009 at 12:50 pm
It doesn't get fun until the officemate explains that Prof. A cannot be for her because Prof. B is (longstanding issues between them that pre-date the Challenger Explosion); and Prof. C would like to be for her, but can't because he doesn't yet have tenure and Prof. A is the dept. chair - Prof. C simply cannot risk a poor review or non-support of his chair heading into his 6th year.
Of course, none of this has anything to do with the quality of the officemate's work, but that's not the point.
8. camillemata - November 23, 2009 at 08:31 pm
Admittedly, there is bound to be a little paranoia regarding professor's treatment or attitude toward their graduate students. However, given others' stories about professors and my own experience with professors in my graduate program, I would have to concede that people have been burned. Some graduate students have been on the verge of completing their dissertations and for some unknown reason, simply not allowed to continue without reason. The culture of at-will applies also to the graduate program. Unfortunately, these narratives might have to do with the tenure; some professors truly take advantage of a privilege that was really meant to protect them from being sacked for speaking critically and/or teaching critical thinking. Your fellow student might have reasons for her feelings that you know very little about. Perhaps you have not yet experienced the impact of being on the receiving end of wayward professors. Nevertheless, she probably should not have voiced her feelings about her list in case it gets out and she is "sacked" by key people on the committee because her list has leaked out and rumors of it are now circulating the department.
9. timebandit - November 23, 2009 at 10:21 pm
Ha, maybe that's just her free time emotional outlet for the many frustrations, OR.... perhaps that gambit had helped the seemingly crazy lady gain her own office in the past? You know, along the lines of undergrad 'annoy your roommate' stories? (In which case, I must say, brilliant move, if rather uncollegial.)
10. graykane - November 24, 2009 at 02:51 pm
While the list seems extreme, I heard the words "[insert faculty member's name here] is out to get me" pretty frequently while I was in graduate school. Honestly, I've heard those same words from at least one assistant professor who desperately needed a good night sleep. The first poster might be right. There's something about the stress and the (mis-)perception that so much of your fate resides in others' judgment of you. Those two ingredients take a significant number of people, at least temporarily, over the edge.
11. rchill - November 25, 2009 at 09:19 am
I have to agree with 22058885: I just graduated (two years ago) with a science (biology) doctorate...and never heard the "professors for/against me comments" - yes,lots of comments relating to teaching ability, or the professors who were just plain nasty in their dealings with everyone, but never a sense of personal attacks. I do think the nature of graduate school in the natural sciences might be different from the social sciences/humanities (my husband's degree is in psychology and we often discuss the differences in the programs). I really did not have the time to interact with other students, as I was taking classes, doing research in the lab, and teaching. I was also an older graduate student and not interested in anything other than my degree, so perhaps I missed some of the drama. I can say, having worked outside of academia a good part of my life, the sometimes neurotic interactions among co-workers is not limited to the world of academia.
Anonymous - did you ever stop to consider your office mate may just have been very self-absorbed, and her behavior had nothing to do with what "graduate school did to her"?
12. taylorvann - December 08, 2009 at 10:10 am
ahh grasshopper, a wise graduate students must know her/his enemies. I was told repeatedly that I had the knowledge, skills, mind for my doctoral work by one committee member in spite of my blonde hair. Another member said I had a brilliant mind but she didn't care for my easy going mannerisms udder examination because I was too cheerful while taking my medicine. Therefore I must not be a serious researcher. My chair? He was no help. Yes, knowing your enemies in advance is very important to implementation of strategies to see you through completion.