He Told Me I Can't Finish My PhD Even in 10 Years; Man Shares How he Shamed his Professor in 2 Years
- A man, Saif Ullah, has inspired many people on social media with his academic program success story
- Saif said his project supervisor had told him that even in 10 years time, he wasn't going to be able to complete it
- He was frustrated and disappointed at first but found courage later on and achieved success beyond the lecturer's imagination
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A man Saif Ullah has stated that one's past is not equal to what the future holds, provided such a person takes hold of his life.
Saif stated this on LinkedIn as he recounted how he proved his professor wrong during his PhD program.
According to him, he had begun his PhD in October 2008 and was disappointed when his professor told him that he couldn't complete the program even in 10 years.
The professor's statement disturbed him but he later found the willpower to persevere.
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He aced the project and successfully defended it in October 2010.
Social media reacts
Kelechukwu Onwukamike wrote:
"Saif Ullah, PhD couldn't have been said better. In my case I was fortunate to have a very supportive supervisor. I can only imagine how difficult it was to deal with all this yourself and at the end you are correct, a PhD journey is you vs you. Thanks for sharing."
Shree Nanguneri commented:
"Congratulations on your milestone of achieving this feat.
"What would you have done differently knowing what you know now if you were to go back in time?
"Wishing you the best in your career, & profession in 2021 -> beyond."
Shyam M. remarked:
"There was nothing wrong with your professor who told you that you wouldn't finish even in ten years. It was actually negative way of motivating a student.
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"Everything depends on our perception. It is because he challenged you, you finished your PhD. Otherwise you probably may not have finished. If one expects petting and pampering then PhD is not for them."
Madeleine L Combrinck commented:
"Never let another person tell you what you can't do. Most importantly, don't believe them. Know who you are, believe in the dream and work for what you want."
Man bags 2 PhDs from foreign varsities years after his chemistry teacher mocked him
Meanwhile, Briefly News previously reported that a man who was mocked by his chemistry teacher had bagged PhD degrees from two foreign universities.
Kelechukwu Onwukamike who currently holds a PhD in organic and polymer chemistry from KIT Germany and the University of Bordeaux, France said he recalled how his secondary school teacher had questioned his resolve to bag an A-grade in chemistry.
According to his LinkedIn post, the incident happened during the 2007 GCE exams. To the teacher's surprise, he got an A in the course eventually.
13 years later, he was awarded in Germany for having the best PhD in that same chemistry. This was after he bagged a first-class in chemistry as an undergraduate.
Source: Briefly News
Maryn Blignaut (Human-Interest HOD) Maryn Blignaut is the Human Interest manager and feature writer. She holds a BA degree in Communication Science, which she obtained from the University of South Africa in 2016. She joined the Briefly - South African News team shortly after graduating and has over six years of experience in the journalism field. Maryn passed the AFP Digital Investigation Techniques course (Google News Initiative), as well as a set of trainings for journalists by Google News Initiative. You can reach her at: maryn.blignaut@briefly.co.za
Kelly Lippke (Senior Editor) Kelly Lippke is a copy editor/proofreader who started her career at the Northern-Natal Courier with a BA in Communication Science/Psychology (Unisa, 2007). Kelly has worked for several Caxton publications, including the Highway Mail and Northglen News. Kelly’s unique editing perspective stems from an additional major in Linguistics. Kelly joined Briefly News in 2018 and she has 14 years of experience. Kelly has also passed a set of trainings by Google News Initiative. You can reach her at kelly.lippke@briefly.co.za.