How do I find motivation in year 4 when I want to quit every day?

Alicia

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Joined
Mar 10, 2026
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6
I'm in my fourth year of PhD and I have nothing left. No motivation, no energy, no will to continue. My research, which I once loved, now feels like a prison I built for myself. Every day I think about quitting. Some days I cry. Some days I just stare at the wall. Some days I do both. 💀

A 2026 article about PhD student mental health said that "graduate students experience depression and anxiety at rates significantly higher than the general population" . I believe it. Every other PhD student I know is struggling too. But knowing it's common doesn't make it easier.

The article mentioned that the isolation of dissertation work is a major factor. You're alone with your research for years. No classes, no cohort, just you and your topic and the growing sense that you'll never finish.

I've tried the standard advice:
  • Break it into small pieces (my pieces are now so small they're meaningless)
  • Write every day (I can't)
  • Take breaks (I take too many)
  • Exercise (I'm too tired)
  • Talk to advisors (they don't get it)
My friend from undergrad who started a normal job after graduation just got promoted. She has money, weekends, friends. I have ramen and anxiety and a document no one will ever read.

The article also talked about "the normalization of overwork" in academia — this idea that you should be working all the time, that rest is weakness . I've internalized that so deeply that even when I try to rest, I feel guilty. So I'm exhausted AND guilty. Great combination.

What actually helps when you're this deep? Not surface-level tips. Not "take a walk." Real strategies for people who are genuinely considering dropping out.

I've thought about quitting so many times. The only thing stopping me is sunk cost — three years already invested. But is that a good reason to stay? Or is it just throwing good years after bad?

For PhDs who almost quit but didn't: what kept you going? What actually helped? I need to hear from people who've been here.
 
The "normalization of overwork" thing is real and it's toxic. I had to actively unlearn the idea that rest is weakness. It helped to schedule guilt-free rest — literally put "do nothing without guilt" on my calendar. At first it felt wrong. Then it felt necessary. Now I protect that time like a meeting.

Also, meds. SSRIs changed my life. Not for everyone but for me, the chemical help was non-negotiable. Talk to a psychiatrist if you can.
 
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