> Be nice, think about hard problems for a long period of time, only speak up when you have something positive to contribute -- be labelled an underperforming academic and managed into obscurity.
I'm in academy and I'm mostly quiet and seek to contribute honestly and I've been managed into obscurity but I'm also quite happy, pay the bills, and more or less enjoy the work. If you want glory you have to deal with bullshit. If you don't want glory, life provides many opportunities to live a modest but productive life.
Over 99% of students who attempt your "mostly quiet" strategy are managed entirely out of academia long before tenure.
You won the lottery, which is great for you, but it's not a strategy to promote to others as life advice.
I'm not tenured and I doubt I will ever be and I'm not even interested in it. I have a support role in academia, get to teach, and am pretty well compensated (though I make 2-3x less than I could in the private sector. But its enough.)
It's the money side that applies pressure there. It's great that you're able to make enough money but a lot of people who aspire to the quiet academic life are stuck in the lower tiers making a pittance.
This is because there are far more people wanting a quiet academic life than there are jobs providing a quiet academic life with a livable wage.
And this is likely to become even more out of balance as college enrollment declines and there are smaller and smaller cohorts of freshmen as fertility continues to decline.
There are pittances and then there are pittances. I make a bit more than a typical adjunct or whatever because I have very specialized skills, but its ok not to make a lot of money.
I mean this is a place where the founder just wrote a blog post about being a billionaire. I'll never be a billionaire, thats for sure.
But I genuinely believe that pursuing that goal is vanity, bad for people mentally and "spiritually" and bad for the world.
There's a lot of wisdom here.