
Grad School is Hard, but.....
Grad School is Hard, but... is a podcast from Dr. Katy Peplin of Thrive PhD. It's for anyone trying to be a human and a scholar, and here to help you dive deeper into how your brain and body work best. Each episode has practical experiments to try to help you find your way through the hard work of grad school, so let's get into it!
Grad School is Hard, but.....
reset or rest - getting past resistance
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if you've ever sat at your desk, willing yourself to get unstuck, and not having it work, this episode is for you. i give you my two step formula, reset or rest, for getting past resistance, because belting yourself to your desk chair (actual suggestion i received once from a prof) isn't it.
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Grad School is Hard, But...is a podcast by Dr. Katy Peplin of Thrive PhD! learn more at thrive-phd.com - can't wait to get to know you better, or get access to my free falling planning workshop here!
📍 Welcome to Grad School is Hard, But... A Thrive PhD podcast. I'm Dr. Katy Peplin and this is a show for everyone who's doing the hard work of being a human and a scholar.
In this season,
I'll be sharing the anchor phrases, tools, and strategies that underpin all of the work that I do with clients as part of Thrive PhD, and of course, the things that work for me as I attempt to be a human and a scholar.
And make sure you check out the link in the show notes for my working more intentionally tool kit. Which is available for you totally for free. Now let's get into it
If you have ever found yourself sticky, distracted, frustrated, or worse, this episode is for you. This is a saying, , an anchor phrase that I like to use, which is called reset or Rest, and it is a phrase that I use when re. Comes up now. Resistance looks different for different kinds of people. It can be when you're sticky, you're distracted, you are spinning your wheels, you're frustrated, you can't land.
For some people I know it looks like scrolling. It could look like switching between all of your tasks all at once. It could look like tab hoarding. It's as individual as the snowflake, but almost all of us have. Experienced resistance when we just don't wanna do it or we can't get into it, or we can't seem to figure it out.
We're just stuck. Now, many people will tell you to push through and there is some merit in that advice, I guess. If you keep pushing, sometimes you do get there, but I find that it is a recipe for burnout much more frequently than it's a recipe for success. So push through methods often look like, ah, set a timer and make yourself stick to it.
I had once a professor who recommended that you belt yourself to your chair if you were finding it hard to write because you would eventually have to do it if you were belted to your chair.
Now. There is some. A theory behind strong arming yourself into doing something. But what I find much more often is that that actually feeds the resistance. It makes it harder to keep going because not only are you, trying to do something that's very hard, which is why you're experiencing resistance in the first place, I guess.
But you are also now stuck in this loop where you're trying to do a hard thing. You find it hard, you feel some resistance, and then you amp up all of those negative feelings. By forcing, by cajoling, by punishing, by removing good stuff. It just leads to more frustration, more fear, more anxiety, because if every time you sat down to write, you had to physically belt yourself to your chair in order to do it, then of course you're going to avoid that.
You're going to find it harder to get excited for the next writing session. You are gonna find it harder to settle. It just doesn't work long term. You might get a short term gain, you might be able to do it that time, but as a sustainable solution, a sustainable strategy, I find that it does more harm than good.
Now, I of course, am not gonna leave you there and be like, this thing doesn't work. Good luck out there. Bye. But what I do find that works is if you offer yourself the choice to either. Reset or rest. This is part of a loop where you notice that you're getting distracted. Where you notice that you're feeling the resistance.
It is difficult to learn how to do that because for many of us, it feels like multitasking. It feels like busyness. It feels like we're at least removing something. But if you find yourself just sort of circling the task and never quite landing, noticing that. Next, accepting that and being like, yeah, I'm feeling it again.
Harder than it sounds. A skill to practice and then taking action. So as part of this notice, accept, take action strategy, that last part, the taking action is where the reset or rest comes in. A reset is something that I love. I love a good reset. I've talked about it on this podcast before. I will share links in the show notes, but basically to quickly sum it up, there are two types of reset.
In my vocabulary, there's a soft reset where I just say to myself, okay, we're resetting. I like to couple it with something physical a little bit of stretching, some wiggling, doing a lap around my office, or maybe a lap around your workspace. Switching tasks and being like, okay, this one doesn't work, but maybe this other one will.
But you basically give yourself the permission. To reset the vibes. You reset them physically, you reset them in terms of what you're working on, what you're focusing on, but instead of just staying stuck in that loop of resistance, you do something else. Now, soft resets work for me through the like gentle resistance.
If I'm really not feeling it that day, if it's really sticky, then I often need what I call a hard reset. Now a hard reset is definitely body forward. You need to do something different with your body. In order for this reset to really take, I find my go-to is a shower. I basically am just declare it a new day and do whatever I'm gonna do In my morning routine.
I take a shower. I sometimes go as far as to getting a new cup of my favorite hot beverage. I can offer myself a snack, but basically I'm giving my body a chance away from my desk to do something different. I find that the more overwhelming the difference, like the difference between my shower and my desk is pretty big, so that works really effectively for me.
But going in through my body, giving it a break, giving my mind, my literal eyes, a chance to do something different, hear something different, feel something different, and then coming back to it often works so much better than trying to think my way through it. That reset acknowledges that I'm not doing what I wanna be doing.
It gives me a chance to breathe, do something different, and then try again. You might say, oh, I don't have time for that. But what I find is that it actually is faster to acknowledge that you're stuck. Take a step to a ameliorate that situation and then come back to it than it is to try and sit and soldier way, soldier your way through it, and figure out how best to move forward without taking an action.
Now that's the reset side of the reset or rest equation. But more often than not, a rest is actually maybe what you need even more profoundly. I don't necessarily mean going back to bed, although sometimes a really good nap can do it. There are lots of different kinds of rest. There's community, rest and creativity.
Rest and sensory rest. I will link to a great article in the show notes to help you explore the different kinds of rest, but giving yourself a chance. To replenish can often make much more of a difference than punishing yourself until you feel ready to work. My therapist likes to say that we're all just big toddlers and that a snack and a nap fixes most things, and I wish that that were less true.
But for me, it really is, and for you it might be as well. So give yourself that chance to say, okay, I am probably finding this even harder than normal because I'm tired, because I'm sensory overloaded, because I'm burned out because I had a really intense few days. I had a really intense situation this morning, and I need to rest before I can try again.
And like resetting where it often is faster to take care of yourself and come back to it. I find that adding rest into the flow of your day or your week can be much more effective than waiting until you absolutely collapse and then resting all at once. So taking some time to give yourself some physical rest to go and stretch your body, to take a fitness class, to have a snack.
All of these different things help you notice, accept where you're at and take action as opposed to just trying to do everything through your brain. This can be hard advice to take sometimes. It's definitely stuff that I am still working on, but when you find resistance, I encourage you this week to reset or rest.
See you soon.
📍 Thank you for listening to Grad School is Hard, but... You can find more information and resources in the show notes and at thrive-phd.com. Every month, I'll select one reviewer for a free 45 minute session with me. So please subscribe, rate, and review to help spread the word about the show. Thanks so much and I'll see you again soon!