Overwhelmed (the 12'' dance remix)

Well, so much for the year of being in balance, and so much for keeping my life in control. It's still relatively early in the school year, and I am already completely overwhelmed.

I've been up since 5am today. At one point today, I had 47 unread emails in my Inbox---and I check my email regularly. I spent maybe 10, 15 "quality" minutes with Baby Jane today, and 0 "quality" minutes with Mr. Jane.

Things were actually going along ok for a while. It's just over the past few days or week, maybe, that things have gotten out of control---like the Mack Truck of Too Much Work came barreling in out of nowhere and hit me before I saw it coming.

I guess it's not a huge surprise that things are falling apart:

  • I am teaching many more students than I normally do. Now, this is a good problem to have in one's tenure year, in one respect (look at me! I'm popular!), but logistically, it's a nightmare. I have extra resources to help deal with the sheer numbers, but there's only so much that these resources can do to help out.
  • Hello, tenure year! Stress!! Everything seems like big stakes now: how soon to send that paper out so that it can hopefully be published before the packet is due, how that class the other day went, should I speak up or keep quiet on that controversial topic in our department meeting, etc. Even random social interactions with colleagues are a bit strained. ("Hey! How's it going! [Oh-my-god-this-person-is-judging-me-as-we-speak! Panicpanicpanic!]"
  • Speaking of tenure, I find myself pretty torn between what I should be doing to earn tenure at my current institution and what will make me marketable should I not get tenure here. There is overlap, of course, but these things don't always match up, and then I have to decide how to best spend my energies.

I am doing some things right, I suppose: I'm being brutal about what I'm taking on (pretty much, nothing except the essentials), I'm saying no a lot, I'm letting go of perfection (or at least limiting the time I allow myself to spend on certain tasks, e.g. teaching prep), and I'm finding time almost every day to exercise (totally necessary for my mental health). But it's still too much for me to handle, at least for now, at least this week.

So I guess I'll just keep plugging away and hope that this passes (please!), and try as best I can to get everything back into, if not true balance, then at least a better balance.

More like this

So as you can probably tell, since I've gotten around to posting the Scientiae carnival, I'm feeling better. Well, I'm out of bed, at least, so that's something. I think it's going to be a long road back to feeling like my "normal" self, though. I'm still tired all the time. Case in point:…
Hello, ScienceBlogs readers! I am so thrilled to be joining this little corner of cyberspace. Allow me to introduce myself and tell you a little bit about why I'm here. I'm Jane. I'm a computer scientist, an assistant professor, and a new mom. Trying to juggle those three identities is, shall we…
In the past at around this time of year, shamelessly borrowing an idea from Laura at Geeky Mom, I've made resolutions for the new academic year. I've been trying to think about what I want my resolutions to be this year, but I've had a hard time of it. Maybe it's the stress of the tenure year…
Chad just posted a bit of pre-tenure advice, including the very important advice to take all advice with a grain of salt. I would say that also applies to the rest of his advice, because I'm about to post contradictory advice. You should also take my advice with a grain of salt. Be aware that it…

I've recently been reading Merlin Mann's (I don't know if that's his real name) Inbox Zero series. One of the things he recommends for keeping from being overwhelmed is: don't check your e-mail regularly!

He has a bunch of other recommendations and tips for keeping your inbox empty, some of which you may find helpful. Fortunately, they're pretty bite-sized articles that I've been able to read one at a time and absorb in small chunks. (Otherwise, it couldn't possibly help, could it!)

By Wilson Fowlie (not verified) on 17 Sep 2008 #permalink

Your list of "doing some things right" sounds spot on. It looks to me like you are doing well at coping, painful though it is. Good job. Keep going! Thanks for sharing.

Today, Chad Orzel (Uncertain Principles) linked to what seems like a good article for tenure-track people. If you haven't seen it already, it's here.