You’re Not Lazy—You’re Stuck

If you’ve found yourself staring at your dissertation for hours (or avoiding it completely), you’re not alone.

“I’m stuck on my dissertation” is one of the most common experiences students have—and one of the least talked about.

Because here’s the truth:
Being stuck isn’t about intelligence, discipline, or even time.

It’s about overwhelm, uncertainty, and mental overload.

And the good news? That means it’s fixable.

Why You Feel Stuck on Your Dissertation

Before we fix it, let’s understand it.

Most students get stuck because of one (or more) of these:

1. You don’t know what the “next step” is

Dissertations are vague by nature. When the path isn’t clear, your brain freezes.

2. You’re overwhelmed by the size of the task

“Write a dissertation” is not a task—it’s 100+ smaller ones.

3. You’re stuck in perfectionism

You feel like you need to get it right before you start.

4. You’ve lost confidence

You’re second-guessing everything, even things you do know.

5. You’re mentally exhausted

Burnout looks a lot like procrastination.

What to Do When You’re Stuck on Your Dissertation

Here’s how to start moving again—step by step.

Step 1: Shrink the Task (Radically)

Instead of:
❌ “Work on my dissertation”

Try:
✅ “Write 3 messy sentences explaining my topic”
✅ “Open my document and rewrite one paragraph”

Momentum comes from small, doable actions, not big intentions.

Step 2: Get Clear on the Next Tiny Step

Ask yourself:

“What is the smallest possible next step I can take?”

Not the whole chapter. Not the full analysis.

Just the next move.

Examples:

  • Find 1 article
  • Summarise 1 paragraph
  • Write 1 bullet point

Clarity reduces resistance.

Step 3: Lower the Standard (Temporarily)

Right now, your job is not to be brilliant.

Your job is to get words on the page.

You can’t edit what doesn’t exist.

Give yourself permission to write:

  • Badly
  • Messily
  • Incomplete

Progress > perfection.

Step 4: Externalise the Chaos

When everything is in your head, it feels overwhelming.

Get it out:

  • Brain dump everything you’re thinking
  • List all the tasks you think you need to do
  • Map your chapter in bullet points

This turns confusion into something you can actually work with.

Step 5: Work With Your Energy (Not Against It)

If you’re exhausted, forcing productivity won’t work.

Instead:

  • Set a 20-minute timer
  • Do one small task
  • Take a break

Consistency beats intensity here.

When You’re Still Stuck (Even After Trying Everything)

This is the part most blogs don’t talk about.

Sometimes, the issue isn’t strategy.

It’s:

  • Self-doubt
  • Fear of failure
  • Fear of not being “good enough”
  • Feeling alone in the process

And that’s where students stay stuck the longest.

Because you can’t logic your way out of something that’s emotional.

A Different Way to Think About Being “Stuck”

What if being stuck isn’t a failure…

…but a signal?

A signal that:

  • You need more support
  • You need more clarity
  • You need a different way of working

Not more pressure.

You Don’t Have to Figure This Out Alone

This is exactly where coaching changes things.

Because instead of:

  • Spinning in your head
  • Second-guessing every step
  • Trying to “push through” on your own

You get:

  • Clear, structured next steps
  • Support that meets you where you are
  • Accountability that actually helps you move forward
  • A space to work through the mental blocks and the work itself

Work With Me

If you’re stuck, overwhelmed, or struggling to make progress on your dissertation, I offer 1:1 academic coaching designed to help you move forward—without burnout or pressure.

Together, we:

  • Break your dissertation into manageable steps
  • Build a realistic, personalised workflow
  • Navigate procrastination, perfectionism, and self-doubt
  • Get you from stuck → progressing → finished

Book a free introductory call to get unstuck and map out your next steps.

(You’ll leave the call with clear direction—whether we work together or not.)

Final Thought

You don’t need more discipline.

You don’t need to “try harder.”

You need:

  • Clarity
  • Structure
  • Support

Start small.
Start messy.
Just start.