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Be the mouse

All over Australia, new PhD candidates are starting their degree. Welcome! You might value this advice from Katy Williams who passed her PhD in Biological Anthropology at the University of Durham in February this year. Katy Williams was born in America, raised all over the world, and studied at universities in England. Between 2011 and 2016 she worked as the Field Team Leader for the Primate and Predator Project in South Africa, had a baby and did a PhD. Katy has recently submitted her PhD in Anthropology at Durham University, UK. Her doctoral research focused on brown hyaena ecology and their relationships with humans. In her spare time Katy reads books such as ‘That’s not my penguin’ on repeat to her 1 year old son, doodles, and goes on safari.

Whilst in the early stages of writing up my PhD I had a baby and now I find myself simultaneously immersed in academic journals and picture books, lab work and bum-wiping, searching for references and for tiny sun hats.

Independently PhDs and babies can take over one’s life. When combined, everything from both of these crazy overwhelming worlds melds into each other. For example I inadvertently labelled the homemade mixed vegetable baby food ‘Butternut squash et al., 2016’.

Now in the final few months of my PhD, I find myself making comparisons between the process of doing a PhD and ‘The Gruffalo’. Perhaps lack of sleep is responsible for jumping to these strange conclusions, but hear me out, I think there are lessons to be learned from a simple story of a mouse and nut.

So why is ‘The Gruffalo’ like doing a PhD?

I think the moral of this story is to be like the mouse. Be creative, be confident, don’t give up, and don’t get eaten. Accept that you will feel scared and small along the way, but also that you will make it through. They don’t call it the deep dark wood for nothing.

No matter how complicated your PhD is or how lost you may feel on the journey, for sanity’s sake, it’s worth simplifying it. Head to your nearest book store and instead of flicking through heavy academic tomes, plonk yourself down on the floor of the brightly coloured children’s section and read ‘The Gruffalo’.

Be the mouse.

Thanks Katy – I loved reading the Gruffalo 10 bazillion times when Thesis Whisperer Junior was small 🙂 Do you have any advice for newbies? What animal provides you with inspiration for the PhD journey?

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