The Postdoc Contradiction: Building Independence While Working on Someone Else's Vision
Postdocs are told to "develop your independent research identity." But you're working on your PI's grants. Their funded projects. Their research questions. How are you supposed to build a program that fits YOU when your work is structured around someone else's vision?
This isn't a personal failing. It's a structural contradiction built into how postdoc positions work. And it's why drift happens: not through one wrong turn, but through a series of reasonable decisions that gradually pull you away from what originally drew you to research.
The Expectation versus the Reality
The expectation is clear: use your postdoc years to establish your research direction, build your CV, and prepare for the faculty job market or your next career move.
But the day-to-day reality? You're working on projects that were funded before you arrived, using methods your PI chose. You're contributing to their research vision, not building your own.
I've written before about how my own postdoc work drifted from my PhD interests. What I didn't see at the time was the pattern beneath it. I took positions based on relationships, geography, and practicality. I said yes to projects because they were funded or because my PI asked. I kept my actual interests alive through unfunded collaborations on the side. Each decision made sense in the moment, but cumulatively they pulled me in directions I hadn't intended to go.
The Pattern
This isn't unique. Postdocs get chosen for reasons that have little to do with research fit: grant funding, legacy work, mentorship opportunities, strategic positioning, or learning new skills.
Each decision is reasonable on its own. But over time, these WHYs accumulate. Genuine curiosity can shrink to 20% or less of what drives your work. Years pass, and you find yourself in a research program that looks good on paper but doesn't align with what you care about.
Mapping It Out
Recently, I mapped out what I was working on during each stage of my career, and more importantly, WHY I was doing it.
What percentage of my time was driven by genuine curiosity versus funding, strategy, or obligation? When did my own interests become secondary? What did I try to keep alive on the side?
Seeing this visually gave me perspective I didn't have before.
Want to see where your drift happened? I created a free template to help you map your research journey and identify the WHYs that shaped your path. Download the free template here. It takes about 20 minutes and might give you clarity you didn't have before.
Finding Some Agency
Understanding the pattern isn't about judgment. It's about seeing what’s been driving your decisions so you can make different choices going forward.
This also isn't about only choosing projects motivated by pure interest. It's about finding ways to work within real constraints while keeping your throughline alive.
Is there a twist you can put on a project that uses your own unique lens? Is there a method you're curious about? Is there an underlying community you're serving that taps into a value that matters to you?
Reflecting on these questions might shift how you see your work. Instead of feeling like all your time is spent on things you don't care about, you might find pieces that DO connect to your deeper motivations, even within projects assigned by your PI. It's about finding the thread that makes it feel connected and intentional.
The template shows you WHERE the drift happened. If you want to go deeper, I work with both individuals and groups:
Workshops for postdoc cohorts, junior faculty groups, and early-career researchers navigating career transitions together
Individual sessions for personalized guidance