"The light of long ago is different from the light of today."
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"The light of long ago is different from the light of today."
The Goldfinch, Donna Tartt
brb gotta go darken my clothes and strike a violent pose
oscar wilde ghost wrote this
the uncanny valley between “this academic article doesn’t make sense because i’m an idiot” and “this academic article doesn’t make sense because the author is an idiot”
That valley is where I live
“Stay away from the ones you love too much. Those are the ones who will kill you.”
~Donna Tartt
Illustration of S T U D Y B L R S 📚😉
PC : Rebecca Mock’s @rebeccamock
I can relate
7 Tips on How to Become a Morning Person
1. Prepare for work/school the night before
set things out that you need to do
pack your backpack or work bags
make your breakfast ahead of time
make sure you have a yummy breakfast so you have something to look forward to in the morning
2. Get to bed early enough that you get 6-9 hours of sleep per night
sleep is important to physical and mental health
when you sleep more then your performance at school/work will be much better than if you get less sleep
sleep can help better cope with emotions
studies have shown adequate sleep can help combat depression, eating disorders and substance abuse
3. Wake up at the same time everyday
this helps to regulate your body’s clock
when done repeatedly this makes it easier to wake up
your body is less likely to know when to start feeling sleepy
this will make you likely to push your bedtime later and further deprive yourself of rest
4. Do NOT hit snooze
the body needs some time to get you ready to wake up
when you hit snooze it allows your body to settle and enter another cycle of sleep
if you hit snooze a second time then your body gets a groggy, fuzzy-headed feeling called sleep inertia
the more you hit snooze, the more confused your body and brain gets
5. When you wake up open your curtains and make your bed
opening your curtains and letting in natural light will let your body know its morning
if it’s still dark outside just turn on the lights
making your bed lets your brain know that the day has begun
this also decreases the chance of crawling back into bed
this accomplishment will set the tone for the rest of day and will encourage you to continue to be productive
6. Stretch
when you sleep, your muscles lose tone and fluid tends to pool along your back
stretching helps massage fluid back into the normal position
stretching can be a great way to get ready physically and mentally into the day
7. Establish a routine
healthy morning rituals set the tone for the rest of the day
it may take some time to master your morning routine
but once you have one try to stick to it
many productivity expert recommends a morning routine in order to start the day
when making a routine think about what kind of person you are
“don’t talk to me before my coffee” person?
sharing your routine with someone? (an s/o or roommate?)
do you like having breakfast with others?
accountability is always a good idea
Waking up earlier and being productive was one of my New Years resolutions! I hope this helps you as well!
Finnish
Finnish is a Uralic language. It is one of the two official languages of Finland and spoken by 5.4 million people. Finnish modifies and inflects nouns, adjectives, pronouns, numerals and verbs, depending on their roles in the sentence.
Finland
Country: Republic of Finland Capital: Helsinki Area: 338,424 km2 Bordered by: Russia, Norway, Sweden Population: 5,513,000 Official languages: Finnish, Swedish President: Sauli Niinistö National anthem: Maamme, “Our Land”
Learn more here!
Hei, moi, terve - hi, hello Hyvää huomenta - good morning Hyvää päivää - good day/afternoon Hyvää iltaa - good evening Hyvää yötä - good night Hei hei, moi moi - bye bye Näkemiin - goodbye Anteeksi - sorry; excuse me Kiitos - thank you Kyllä - yes Ei - no
Listen: Jenni speaking Finnish
Resources
Wikipedia
Omniglot
Finnish resources
Memrise
The Finnish Teacher
Taste of Finnish
Venla.info
By: http://instagram.com/crimeofrhyme
archive moodboard for @deadlinesandcoffeegrinds ( 1, 2, 3, 4 )
hot takes for white male authors we all had to read for high school. i’m depressed and dumbass thot.
it’s a great day to not be an English major
*not to be
it’s a great day to not be an English major
*not to be
the signs as things i’ve witnessed at the library during finals
aries : someone coming in with a 12 pack of red bull and chugging a can every half hour
taurus : someone yelling “PLEASE GO DIE ELSEWHERE” at a girl who had a coughing fit
gemini : someone pressing all the buttons in the elevator to delay studying
cancer : someone crying while looking for a book in the medieval history section
leo : a fight breaking out between two friends because one of them refused to share his muffin
virgo : someone crying really loudly while reading hamlet at approx. 1am
libra : the security guard throwing the noisy people out
scorpio : someone testing all the ringtones on their phone before picking the default one
sagittarius : someone pulling out a whole entire pizza from their duffel bag and eating it at 9am
capricorn : the old dude distributing coffees to everyone on the second floor
aquarius : someone sitting down, falling asleep in two minutes and waking up four hours later
pisces : someone organizing a silent disco near the elevator at 2 am
12|10 pink on pink on pink….i had a really good day at uni, having engaging discussions with your peers//teachers is such a pleasure & makes me grateful to be a student everyday!
Eradicate “Smart Kid” Norms
The goal of this post is to raise awareness to damaging behaviour towards a group otherwise ignored due to their academic prowess and supposedly problem-free lives.
Growing up as the standard “smart kid” I’ve encountered problems and witnessed them in other “smart kids” too. In this post, I’d just like to highlight some of them and perhaps show the effects of what other people deem as normal behaviour that can actually be harmful towards top students.
PSA: SMART KIDS …
- hate being compared to
if you are the top of your class, every test is a problem. people will turn around when they get a result and try to see yours in order to evaluate themselves instead of take the grade they’ve been awarded. for example, instead of accepting you got a B, you see that the “smart kid” got a C and instantly feel better about yourself, or vice versa if they got more than you. this kind of behaviour is not only damaging to who you’re comparing to (since people often express their negative views on their grades towards you, I commonly get the “of course you would get an A” or “I can’t believe I got more than you!”) but also to yourself - of course in school you’re taught to compare yourself, but your biggest competitor is yourself and you should always be aiming to outdo your best attempt rather than what the “swot” gets.
- need to be supported regardless of their grades
a particularly sad experience I personally have is collecting my exam results last year. I went in with all my friends, they got their envelopes, jumped up and down in joy at what they got … it came to my turn, I saw what I got, I turned around to tell them - and they told me not to say a thing. they didn’t want to know! to an extent, I get this (see previous point about comparative self-worth) but when you achieve something, you wanted to be recognised and appreciated, especially by your friends. telling your smart friend not to share what they got on a paper is purely bad friendship - everyone’s successes, no matter how small or frequent, deserve to be celebrated.
- aren’t always bragging
this is a problem I’m facing even now. I rarely talk about my achievements or grades in fear of being disliked or viewed as competition. if I get an A on a mock, I barely say a thing because I don’t want to come off as lacking modesty or over-confident. how do you say things about how well you’re doing without offending, belitting or annoying other people?
- shouldn’t carry your group projects
all I’m going to say on this one is that if you let the “smart kid” do all the work in school, you’re wasting your own time. if you have to be in lesson for fifty minutes anyway, you might as well learn, rather than waste another fifty minutes elsewhere revising for your exam!
- don’t always revise
some people revise. others don’t. be nice to your local “smart kid” - don’t assume they revised all day and night for that A, that they put in 100% effort all the time to validate yourself, or get mad when you hear them say they didn’t revise or are screwed for a test. I frequently don’t revise for tests since I have more important exams coming up for but it’s not my fault if I still get a decent grade. some people are more suited towards a particular subject and that’s okay, because you are too!
- have just as many worries
smart kids have worries too. they still fear about university applications, tests, job interviews, boyfriends, all the jazz that everyone else does. competency in a subject doesn’t ensure you a place. the worrying fact that exists is that there will always be someone smarter, someone more experienced, someone generally better than you, regardless of whether you are smart or not, therefore you shouldn’t get frustrated at people who are worried when you think they shouldn’t be.
- aren’t always well-behaved
they don’t all wear glasses. they don’t not have social lives. they don’t all care about school. just like everyone else, intelligence means squat if you’re not having fun. whilst you should always respect the school system, don’t assume that being smart means not making jokes or goofing off, or that doing those things will impact your intellectual performance in any way.
- have bad days
yes, I know I knew the answer yesterday. yes, I know I can do better than that. yes, smart kids have bad days! if an overachiever gets a lower mark than usual, be nice. it may make you feel good to have done better than the “nerd” but imagine how they feel about it if they are academically-conscious. if they’re nice to you, be nice to them. that’s all there is to it.
- want to help you
of course “smart kids” want to help you improve, especially if they can show off their knowledge whilst doing so. it’s a compliment to be asked for help because it shows you’re respected and intellect is acknowledged, however, copying someone’s work or getting them to do the work for you is wrong. it’s unfair to ask the “smart kid” for last night’s homework if you didn’t do it, or coast off their work because they sit a desk too close to you. keep your integrity when doing work.
- aren’t only good at academic subjects
2018 should be the year we reject the concept that only STEM subjects count, that anyone who majors in English or Art or Drama isn’t as intelligent as someone who does physics. recognise a degree for a degree, talent for talent, ability for ability. anybody can be a “smart kid”, it doesn’t mean you have to score perfect As or have some quantifiable measure. redefine smart to mean knowledgeable and suddenly everyone you know, even you, is a smart kid.
- can only have an academic job
leading on from this, don’t think that someone’s ability defines their future career. someone could be a killer biologist but want to go into dancing. let them! it’s their choice and nobody should be defining it as wasted potential.
- don’t feel intellectually superior
chances are, they don’t care about intelligence. it’s nice to have but you know what’s nicer? talking about Netflix, or football, or other interests with their friends we’re not numbers and grades, we’re people with passions, and intellect is a small part of a huge thing called personality that everyone has. especially at school age, an A* student isn’t thinking they can’t be friends with a D student. they’re thinking about what they’re having for dinner tonight, and when they can next hang out with their best friend.
- should never be belitted by teacher
finally, this is a general point that has affected a million students regardless of ability. teachers deserve respect but they can also lose it if they begin to treat the class unlike equals. smart kids may stereotypically be seen as teacher’s pets but in reality, it is often the other way round. I can’t count the times a teacher has deliberately skipped me when searching for an answer, even if I’m the only one with a hand up, or the amount of times I’ve been asked not to contribute, on both hands. everyone is entitled to an education so fair enough if a teacher wants to push less talkative students, but if it gets to the point where a smart kid has been stopped from talking, put on the spot with a particularly mean question or been downright bullied by the person who is supposed to be fair, speak up. the effects of being dampened can be long-lasting and hurtful, resulting in smart kids who no longer participate or enjoy school.
Again, this post wasn’t meant to offend anyone, or put myself up on a pedestal as a “smart kid”. Of course, there are positives to doing well at school, like good job opportunities and academic success, but I see lots of awareness raised for students who don’t do so good and feel like there should be balanced representation out here. The general moral from all of this is that everyone in education should be treated with respect and allowed to develop surrounded by support from peers and teachers regardless of their ability. This includes underachievers, overachievers, the coasters, the tryhards - any name you have for a type of student - 2018 is the year we’re eradicating education-based shaming.