The Present Minds
By Dr. Shalu Chopra • Published on • The Prism

I Left My Doctorate and Six Years of Teaching. Here Is What That Actually Cost.

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Dr. Shalu Chopra
Written By Dr. Shalu Chopra Columnist

Dr. Shalu Chopra explores media, communication, and the evolving relationship between information and society. Writing from the UK, her work reflects on how ideas…

I completed my doctorate in January 2024.

Six years of teaching had come before it. Lecture halls, marked papers, students who called me by a name that carried weight.

From the outside it looked like a life well-built. From the inside, near the end, it had started to feel like a room I had memorised. Leaving academia was not something that I had planned.

I knew every corridor. Every rhythm of the semester. Every kind of student question and what it actually meant beneath the surface. I had mastered the shape of something I was no longer sure I wanted.

So I left. I walked away from the institution, the title, and the role I had spent years earning. I went abroad to study something completely different.

It was the most frightening decision I had made in years.

leaving academia

The Silence Nobody Warns You About

Nobody tells you about what comes after leaving academia.

Not the peaceful kind of quiet. The kind that arrives when every structure that told you who you were is suddenly gone, and you are standing in the empty space wondering what is actually left.

I had a title for six years. I had a clear place in a room, a role that answered the question of who I was before I had to answer it myself.

That goes immediately when you leave.

The credentials stay on paper. But the daily sense of knowing where you belong, that disappears the moment you stop showing up.

I thought I was prepared for it. I had even told myself the transition would be manageable. I really was not prepared at all.

Leaving academia does not feel like a crisis when you do it. It feels like one three months later, when the bravery has faded and the new thing has not yet arrived.

The Classroom I Did Not Expect

Going abroad put me back in a classroom. But on the other side of it. Which sounds like a small thing until you are actually sitting there, six years of teaching behind you, genuinely unsure of the answer.

Where I had explained things for six years, I now reached for them. Nobody deferred to me. Nobody softened their feedback because of my title.

My peers saw me as exactly what I was. A person trying to understand something, sitting next to other people trying to understand something.

That equality did something I did not expect. I became more confident in that room than I had been in any lecture I had delivered from memory.

Not the polished confidence of expertise. Something quieter. The confidence of a person who has looked at their own confusion without flinching.

The most useful thing teaching gave me was the ability to recognise when real learning was happening. I had stopped recognising it in myself. Being a student again reminded me what it felt like.

Being the confused one in the room, after years of being the one with answers, is one of the most clarifying things I have ever done.

Too Much and Not Enough

Then I came home. And this is the part that has no clean narrative.

The positions I might have stepped into had been filled. Restructured. Quietly dissolved. The cross-disciplinary thinking I had built abroad did not translate as cleanly as I had hoped into the vocabulary of available jobs.

I found myself doing something I had spent years helping students avoid. Moving without direction. Filling days with possibilities that had not yet hardened into plans.

There is a specific feeling to being highly qualified and professionally adrift at the same time. The world has a quiet script for it. It says your problem is one of fit. That you are somehow too much and not enough simultaneously.

That script wears you down if you let it run long enough without interruption. And for a while, I let it run.

The hardest part of leaving academia was not the uncertainty. It was being told, quietly and repeatedly, that the uncertainty was my fault.

What Remains

I do not have a clean answer yet.

What I do know is that the skills from six years in a lecture hall do not vanish because the room changed. Reading a room. Holding an argument together. Asking the question that opens rather than closes.

Those travel. They wait. They find new contexts if you give them the patience and space to do so. I have seen enough of that in the past year to believe it.

I am not who I was standing at the front of that lecture hall. I am also not yet who I am becoming.

For now I exist somewhere between those two people.

It is uncomfortable. It is also, honestly, the most present I have felt in years.

This space is not a waiting room. It is just where the work happens to be right now.

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Dr. Shalu Chopra
Written By

Dr. Shalu Chopra

Columnist

Dr. Shalu Chopra explores media, communication, and the evolving relationship between information and society. Writing from the UK, her work reflects on how ideas move through people, platforms, and public discourse.

Key Takeaways
  • Leaving academia can lead to a profound loss of identity and belonging, as the roles and titles that once defined a person suddenly disappear.
  • Returning to being a student after years of teaching can foster a new kind of confidence rooted in embracing confusion and genuine learning.
  • Transitioning out of academia often involves facing uncertainty and professional drift, compounded by societal narratives that blame the individual for their lack of fit.
  • Skills developed in academia, such as critical thinking and communication, remain valuable and can adapt to new contexts with patience and time.
  • The period after leaving academia is uncomfortable and uncertain but can also be a time of presence and personal growth, existing between past identity and future possibilities.
Glossary
Leaving academia
The process of departing from a career or role within academic institutions, often involving a loss of professional identity and community.
Academic identity
The sense of self and belonging derived from holding a position, title, or role within an academic environment.
Professional drift
A state of moving through career possibilities without clear direction or stable plans, often experienced after leaving a structured role.
Cross-disciplinary thinking
An approach that integrates knowledge and methods from different academic disciplines to create new understanding or solve problems.
Re-entering education
The experience of becoming a student again after having been an educator, involving a shift in perspective and role.
Confidence of confusion
A form of self-assurance that comes from acknowledging and engaging with one's own uncertainty and lack of immediate answers.
FAQ
Why did the author leave academia despite a successful career?
The author left academia because the environment began to feel like a memorized room, lacking new challenges and personal fulfillment. Although the decision was not planned, it was driven by a desire for change and exploration beyond the familiar academic structure.
What challenges did the author face after leaving academia?
After leaving, the author experienced a loss of identity and belonging, as the professional role and title no longer defined them. They also faced uncertainty about their career path, with previous positions filled or restructured, leading to feelings of being professionally adrift.
How did returning to being a student affect the author?
Returning to the classroom as a student humbled the author and fostered a new kind of confidence rooted in embracing confusion and learning alongside peers. This experience reminded them of the authentic process of learning, contrasting with their previous role as an expert lecturer.
What does the author mean by 'too much and not enough'?
This phrase reflects the paradox of being highly qualified yet lacking a clear professional fit after leaving academia. The author felt overqualified for some roles but underprepared for others, leading to a sense of professional limbo and societal messages that blamed them for this uncertainty.
What remains valuable from the author's academic experience?
The author believes that skills such as reading a room, facilitating arguments, and asking open questions remain valuable despite leaving academia. These transferrable skills can adapt to new contexts with patience and provide a foundation for future growth and identity development.
Editorial Note

This piece is part of The Present Minds, essays on psychology, identity, and modern life.

Discussion
ShipraJun 3, 2026
Beautifully expressed . Loved it!