I'm a 5th year PhD student in the US studying Experimental Psychology with an accepted Master's from a different Experimental Psychology program. I've had a fairly rough grad school experience overall, which my older posts can elaborate on. I'm currently living with my parents 4.5 hours away from where I'm doing my PhD because I'm done with dissertation data collection and my only in person commitments are for my fellowship and dissertation defense (whenever that happens).
After some discussions with others and knowing my limitations (e.g., poor abstract reasoning, poor verbal fluency), I've decided that I've wanted to be a social science research technician. I'm even open to becoming a social science research analyst as well since I recently interviewed for that position (but was rejected sadly) and was one of three who passed a competency test for that position.
Given that such a position wouldn't require a PhD, I'm strongly considering dropping from this program altogether now given the myriad of mental health, physical health, advising (my first PhD advisor dropped me), and financial issues this program's had all along. I've wanted my awful program experience to end by leaving it either after I got a job offer in hand or graduating from it.
Now that I've committed to a research technician or analyst position, I'm thinking that dropping is the best move despite working on my Results and Discussion sections. A lot of folks advise not dropping from a PhD because it burns connections, but what are the other potential consequences of leaving a PhD program for a technician position (should I get one soon working with my home state's vocational rehabilitation)? I'd like to know.