Habits, Not Hacks: Stories and Strategies for Grad School That Stick

Our goal is to infuse the grad school conversation with emotional intelligence, resilience, and sustainable success - exactly what many students crave but often struggle to articulate. This story-driven, reflective series tailored for the unique challenges of academic life. Through short essays, mini-memoirs, and hard-earned lessons, we spotlight small but meaningful habits that make academic life more livable and less overwhelming.

Each habit also comes with a companion PI/Supervisor Edition, because sustainable success in grad school isn’t a solo effort.

All names and scenarios are fictional or composite. Any resemblance to real people is coincidental. Stories are crafted to illustrate common experiences in research training.

Habit, Not Hack: Ask Better Questions Before You Join a Lab (Trainee)

Starting somewhere new in research is disorienting in ways nobody prepares you for. The science you can learn. It's the unwritten rules — who to ask, what's expected, what counts as a mistake — that quietly drain you. The researchers who adapt fastest aren't always the most talented. They're the ones who figured out the operating system sooner.

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Habit, Not Hack: Build a Lab People Can Safely Enter (Mentor)

Most labs don't have an onboarding problem. They have an assumption problem — the assumption that capable people will figure it out. Some do. But the ones who figure it out fastest are usually the ones who already knew the unwritten rules before they arrived. Welcoming someone well isn't softness. It's how you build a lab where the best thinking can actually happen.

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Habit, Not Hack: Design work around energy (Trainee)

The problem isn't that you're not working hard enough. It's that you're doing the hardest work at the worst possible time. Researchers are trained to measure effort in hours. But not all hours are the same, and not all work is the same — and pretending otherwise doesn't make you more productive. It just makes you more tired. You cannot manufacture energy you don't have. But you can stop wasting the energy you do. That's not a hack. That's a habit.

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