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Self-Doubt: An Anthology of Experiences in the Biomedical Sciences

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Every scientist encounters self-doubt. It appears early, shifts shape over time, and often remains unspoken. It surfaces after critical feedback, during long silences, and in moments when confidence seems expected but feels absent.

Self-Doubt brings together a collection of personal essays from scientists across the biomedical sciences, written at different career stages and from a wide range of backgrounds. The contributors include first-generation students, international researchers, technicians, postdoctoral scientists, clinicians, and senior academics. Each reflects on moments when confidence faltered and belonging felt uncertain.

The chapters move through classrooms, laboratories, field sites, hospitals, and leadership roles. Readers encounter accounts of failed experiments, rejected grants, interrupted training, illness, grief, migration, financial pressure, and structural barriers. These experiences often unfold quietly, in parallel with visible achievement. On CVs and webpages, careers appear linear and assured. In lived experience, they rarely feel that way.

The essays show how doubt is shaped by evaluation systems, productivity metrics, short-term contracts, and scarcity of opportunity. In these conditions, uncertainty becomes personal even when its sources are structural. Again and again, contributors describe mistaking self-doubt for evidence that they are unsuited to science.

This book acknowledges self-doubt as a shared feature of working at the edge of knowledge, rather than a personal failure to be overcome.

Written with care and restraint, Self-Doubt speaks to readers at any stage of their scientific journey. For students questioning whether they belong, researchers carrying unspoken fear, or leaders supporting others through fragile moments, the chapters provide language, companionship, and solidarity.

Self-Doubt makes visible a part of scientific life that often stays hidden, and reminds us that uncertainty is woven into the work of discovery itself.

This book is for anyone who works in biomedical science, and for those who care about the people who do. It speaks to students and early-career researchers, technicians, clinicians, and experienced scientists alike, including those building careers far from home, managing illness or caring responsibilities, or living with hidden insecurity. If you have ever felt alone in your doubts, or wondered whether uncertainty meant something was wrong with you, this book is for you.

84 pages, Kindle Edition

Published January 18, 2026

About the author

Adrian Liston

11 books

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