Iβve always struggled with social anxiety and self-confidence in different areas. It waxes and wanes in amplitude, but itβs always there. This affects my ability to do research as I struggle to do things like use the phone, send emails asking people to do things in a timely fashion, and finish work due to perfectionism.Β
It was really bad a couple of years ago, during my PhD. We had official annual meetings with a member of staff to check on progress back then, which were a good idea but terrified the students. I always had mine with a member of faculty a lot of people are scared of. Iβm not sure why, maybe because their courses were very difficult and they was a strict marker? Iβd heard theyβd mellowed over the years so maybe, like a fear of the dark, studentsβ wariness passed down the generations.Β
Whatever the reason, Iβd never been scared of them, and always saw them as a fair mind when it came to assessing my progress. I wouldnβt believe myself or my friends mostly, but Iβd trust them to tell the truth. On my last meeting they knew I wasnβt very well. I always cried in these meetings through stress/lifting of stress, so true to form the box of tissues were ready and they offered me a fruit tea. I had the summer fruits. It was really sweet and calming, and I didnβt need the tissues that year.
We spoke at length about why I was struggling within myself when my work seemed perfectly fine, even really good in places. And we got talking about anxiety when not at work. Turns out both of us have similar social anxiety problems! We both struggle to go in a shop with no or few other customers, because we hate being watched by staff. Itβs really specific but I bet itβs common haha. We both hate using the phone, even ordering take away is difficult! Maybe this is why I wasnβt scared of them?Β
At any rate, it was great to know I wasnβt alone, here was a full professor with the same problems I have, still doing science! But, I asked, how do you do it? How did you get this high up the ladder and not quit, or not take it out on yourself? How are you not anxious all the time?
Oh, I am anxious, they said. I was really bad for years. Wouldnβt use the phone at all. But then I was made Head of Department.Β
Thatβs terrifying! What did you do?
Well I was still anxious, about using the phone for example. But I realised, the Head of Department uses the phone to call people to get things sorted quickly. And at the moment, Iβm Head of Department. Thatβs the hat Iβm wearing. The Head of Department picks up the phone and the Head of Department speaks to people to Get Things Done. Thatβs a role Iβm performing, thatβs all, and people expect me to be the Head of Department. And it helped, and now I can use the phone because Iβm used to it.Β
Hearing them say that was a bit of an epiphany. They werenβt sayingΒ βjust suck it upβ, itβs a complete reframing of the interaction.Β
YOU might not like using the telephone to ask so-and-so to do something, but Scientist-In-Charge-Of-Making-This-Thing-Work DOES call Collaborators to remind them, and then Collaborators can respond that they forgot, or they have it scheduled in for next week, because itβs their role to do something.Β
YOU might be scared of going into that shop, but a Potential Customer does go into shops and look around. Potential Customer might be asked by Sales Rep whether they need help, and Potential Customer can say just browsing. Sales Rep may watch Potential Customer browse, but thatβs okay, because theyβre waiting to perform their role. And when Potential Customer leaves the shop, they arenβt that role anymore, back to self. Interaction done.Β
YOU might not want to email that person to ask them for a reference, BUT a Final Year Student DOES send the email, because part of their role is to get a reference at the end. And the person receiving the email also has a role, and that is Someone Who Sometimes Gets Reference Requests, that they can response Yes or No to. Then Final Year Student can get their reference about Final Year Student or can move on to someone else. Interaction over. Slate clean.
Sometimes we get so caught up we forget that many of the things we do are divorced from our own self, and we worry about judgements from other people. But in a lot of our interactions, especially at work or school, we have a set of roles and rules. When itβs getting really hard for me to do things like email, phone, or go somewhere, it helps me to think of that Professorβs first day as Head of Department, them sitting there with that weight of responsibility and internally screaming as they pick up the phone the first time, because thatβs what Head of Departments do. If they can do it and normalise it, I know I can too. One day! :)Β