theodorecphd:
For Theodore, being right was more of a default state, really, but he appreciated anyone else noticing it. “I wish I could say I wasn’t the same way but–well, you see how I am when I get even a whiff of inspiration for my dissertation, and while I wouldn’t say I’m behind on it, I’m not…not behind either.” There wasn’t really a timeline, and his advisor seemed to lack any real drive for him to finish quickly, which Theodore hoped was a sign that he wanted the best possible paper. “It’s that, or to teach me a lesson, right?” He cracked a smile. The guards were hardly punitive–in his experience–but he wouldn’t exactly put it passed some of them either. “I’m not sure if it’s better to write a work that’s world-altering, or just quietly helpful to the people who need to read it the most, but I’m not sure I want the fame…” he admitted, a tad shy.
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“Well you’re not not behind until you’re done, right?” Brianna herself didn’t have much experience with graduate or doctoral programs but she vaguely remembered her sister’s mad scramble to finish all of her research and writing on time for her program. That and the high, messy bun she used to wear and lose pencils in at the very top of her head. “It’s probably to teach you a lesson, but they’ll take credit for both.” Bri laughed, knowing all too well how the government tended to function and think. “I don’t know which I’d want either.” She thought. There was something to be said about the glory of working and solving cases that brought national recognition but there was also something about the quiet thankfulness of families that weren’t as widely publicized. “I think world-altering puts too much pressure on the ‘and what are you going to do next?’ There’s really only down from there unless you alter the world a second time. History will paint the picture of your mistakes over your triumphs.”















