TY - CHAP AB - Abstract This chapter intends to provide a reflexive discussion of the experience I loosely refer to as the ‘supervisory relationship breakdown’, which led me to withdraw from a Professional Doctorate in the penultimate year of completion. The event left an indelible impact upon me; a reminder of my blackness, the contrast between that and the ivory tower of academia and the emotional toil I endured as each incident unfolded, ultimately leading to my exit and the shattering of my emotional wellbeing. The term ‘supervisory relationship breakdown’ is a superficial reference to a complex entanglement of what I deemed to be dysconscious racism and attempts situated historically to control people of colour through education. I will explore how I as a black woman in academia believe I am perceived through a dysconscious racial lens, a lens shaped by a perception to maintain white privilege. I posit how a misalignment existed between who I am and who I was perceived to be by my doctoral supervisor. The space between this misalignment became filled with inequity, tension and oppression, culminating in the relationship breakdown. I present an ‘implosion’ of the relationship as a metaphor for the embodied affect having to withdraw from the doctorate had on me; it felt as though my ‘self’ – body, mind and spirit – were broken, in a state of collapse which I did not know how I would recover from. I conclude with support and renewed hope, I returned to academia and found an alternative approach for completing my doctorate. SN - 978-1-83909-965-6, 978-1-83909-964-9/ DO - 10.1108/978-1-83909-964-920201007 UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83909-964-920201007 AU - Walker Sharon ED - Richard Majors ED - Karen Carberry ED - Theodore S. Ransaw PY - 2020 Y1 - 2020/01/01 TI - Racism in Academia: (How to) Stay Black, Sane and Proud as the Doctoral Supervisory Relationship Implodes T2 - The International Handbook of Black Community Mental Health PB - Emerald Publishing Limited SP - 93 EP - 111 Y2 - 2024/04/25 ER -