Signup date: 08 Jan 2016 at 12:02am
Last login: 30 Mar 2021 at 8:40pm
Post count: 1246
It is not essential that you have a clear vision of what you want to do with the PhD afterwards. It is far more important that you simply want to do one in a particular area you are interested in.
You really cannot plan your life 3 to 5 years ahead. Especially not when you are as young as 30.
Life will almost certainly change your plans. You will be a totally different person when you come out the other end.
There is no guarantee that a PhD will get you out of supermarket work.
You have mentioned your age so you are clearly concerned that it migt be a factor. It won't be. You grades shouldn't cause too many problems either.
If you are genuinely interested in this I would go for it. You might regret it if you don't. Try and find a fully funded position first though. Borrowing that sort of money for a PhD is bonkers.
Personally, I would ghost these fellow workers. I would essentially pretend that to all intents and purposes, they were dead to me. I wouldn't acknowledge their presence in any shape or form.
I have had to do it before but I have not had problems to the extent that you are suffering.
I would work through the night if I had to and I would try to establish contacts outside the immediate lab and use those people for help.
Finally, during my talk, if another student laughed or chatted to a colleague I would stop talking and ask them to shut the fuck up. If a member of staff did this I would ask them what the problem was and deliver a silent icy stare. A second incident and I would stop presenting and either sit down or leave. The key is to do all this without getting emotional or angry. It is all done in a calm but assertive manner. You need to be able to convey an image of supreme confidence even though inside you are all over the place. In fairness it took me years to master this.
They are treating you like this because they sense you are weak and possibly needy. People who portray strength tend to avoid this sort of bullying.
I dont know if any of that is going to be helpful for you but I have not experienced bullying in the workplace since I adopted the above.
In my opinion, you need to treat the Masters as a full time job to get the most out of it. Whether that will mainly be reading or not will depend on your course.
It really depends on what you want to get out of the experience. You can get the classic mediocre pass or you can excel depending on how you approach it.
Exactly what do you want from it? Can you put a value on it?
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