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that I had a happy childhood, whereas my sister’s was closer to the point as she gently mentioned the poetic, or academic, license involved in my description.”39 This is a reminder that our stories are never just our own: they are also part of the stories of those others whose lives intersect with ours. In putting experience into the public domain of academic discourse, respect for the feelings and privacy of partners, family, and friends will often require that only certain stories are told, in a very certain way. Furthermore, how one chooses to present oneself, in academic life-writing as anywhere else, is shaped by how one wishes to appear; thus behavior and motivations of which one is not proud are likely to be omitted or drastically altered in the telling.

      The Trouble with Narrative

      The research that underpins this chapter thus far was originally undertaken to support my own choice of a methodology of autobiographical reflection. The period of my initial research into life-writing in academic scholarship coincided with the long summer vacation, the first six weeks of my giving up smoking, and living alone for the first time. I came to consider whether these factors had a considerable effect on my reading: without the sense of routine provided by cigarettes, flatmates or term-time activities, my sense of self became rather hazy, and this was exacerbated by reading about the theory and practice of writing the self. At the time I wrote, I’ve been wandering around my flat, bearing sticking plasters. I forget that they are seeping in nicotine; instead I feel that they are patching up leaking holes.

      I was looking for theoretical support and precedence for bringing my self (a self that seemed to be dissolving into the haze of the smoke of the cigarettes that I was not smoking) into my scholarship. What I found instead was that it was more complicated than simply being brave and preparing myself for some of my academic colleagues finding my writing embarrassing, or inappropriate, or—even worse—boring. The above discussions of the personal voice in academic criticism underscored what I was