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Jane is an assistant professor in a computing field, and a new mother. Join her as she navigates the tenure track, deals with gender issues, figures out how to be a parent, and tries to have some semblance of a life.

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Blogging about teaching: the miniseries
Introduction
The intro courses
The intro courses, part 2
The mid-tier courses
The upper-level courses

Stuff I should probably be working on:
Journal paper #1 -- submitted, under review
Journal paper #2 -- being retooled, 60% complete
Journal paper #3 -- publication pending!
Easy conference paper -- experiments completed, need to start writing!
Next stage work -- preliminary experiments complete
Cool extension -- preliminary data gathered

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Operating outside my comfort zone

Category: work-life balance
Posted on: June 15, 2008 11:29 PM, by Jane

In the spirit of this year's theme, "Fearless", I have signed up to run a race that's a bit longer distance than I'm normally comfortable running. Not significantly longer, but longer.

At the time I signed up for it, it seemed like a good idea---I would have plenty of time to train. But then....May hit, and the training took a hit. And now the race is less than a month away, and I'm very much behind in my preparation.

But this year I am FEARLESS, and I know the Worst Thing That Could Happen is that I have to walk for a bit instead of running the whole way. You know what? Big fat hairy deal. I made a deal w/ myself that I would do this race, and I'm gonna do it, and it's going to be fine, regardless of what happens.

Jeez, I wish I could be this zen about my tenure case.

Comments

I've been trying to figure out the question of overpreparing vs. underpreparing vs. being overcommitted lately. There was some talk of it on Doctor Pion's blog: his point (or my caricature thereof) was that preparing (for lectures) in advance can help reduce overall stress levels and reduce wasted time. But overpreparing in advance is a waste of time.

On the other hand, being too overcommitted leads to burnout.

Posted by: plam | June 16, 2008 3:23 PM

True, plam, very true! Finding that right balance between being prepared and being overprepared is tricky.

Posted by: Jane | June 16, 2008 9:26 PM

Good post. Have you read Stewart Walker's "Winning, the psychology of competition." 1980, ISBN 0-393-03225-8? Walker is a psycologist and world-class small sailboat racer who has written extensively on the subject.

Posted by: Jim Thomerson | June 27, 2008 3:04 PM

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