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@kirstystudysbsu
(8/100) we're gonna ignore the week off ok i was sick as hell đ anyway mind mapping and reading for my dissertation !!
i use the app drawboard pdf for all my readings bc i can use the pen to highlight and write notes without having to print everything i want to read (which is good bc there's SO MUCH)
22/03/21 - Going back to posting regularly and no matter the circumstances. Still feeling caught in this crisis, but reading saves lives at the moment. Working on two big essays involving gender studies, gray early mornings, swapping coffee for tea and waiting for spring to come.
knuckle tats that say JSTOR PDF
write bad poetry.Â
wrap your mouth into a cliche. write about icarus, write about roses. write about the flowers in your ribs and the stain of your fingertips and the skin of your knees. write about cigarettes and getting high and kissing the wrong person. and space; write about space over and over in sixty iterations of it, write about star-blood and star-crossed and star-glowing, write about universes and galaxies and gladiators in constellations. write about the space between two people in a small room, write about the space that is too small no matter how big it is, write about the space that is too big no matter how small it is. write yourself a star and eat it, tinfoil-tasting, on the floor of your kitchen, while you regret missing your motherâs cooking. but write it.
write ugly. use too many undercase letters because youâre pretentious. USE ONLY CAPITAL LETTERS BECAUSE YOUâVE GOT A SCREAM TRAPPED UNDER YOUR FINGERNAILS. ,, cut & paste grammar (? who gives a shit ?) ,, r3inv3nt so much u come back 2 l33t speak, dial it down a bit. write in the language of flaubert, then dickens, then the language your father used before he learned english. then write the language of talking to your dog, then write the language of high school essays on books you never finished. utilize the word utilize where it donât belong. fall in and out of love with contractions. accidentally become bukowski for a hot sec, grow out of it.Â
write things you wish you hadnât. write stuff so bad you canât help groaning. write things that end in âa;sljflk jfg hâ because they petered out while you were typing. write things that feel childish and use so much rhyme it throws you out of it. write things that feel grown-up and unfamiliar, too formal to function, up-their-own-asses. write things too enigmatic; forget what you wrote them about, but tell yourself itâs for the best. write things too obvious. go through a micro-poetry spell, go through a prose-poetry spell, fish the bottom of the box for x-ray goggles and write about how the cereal felt. write about your cat and the rug and un-deep fake-deep terrible stuff.
write things you really wish you hadnât. stuff that hurts to read and hurts to look at later, stuff that makes your skin uncomfy and your body crawl. write stuff that looks better at the back of your closet. but stuff you canât get rid of, really, not ever. stuff that, afterwards, makes you feel heavier. stuff that somehow, impossibly, kinda makes you lighter.
write about stuff you donât really understand, write about social problems you barely experience, write about slam poetry. write about power outlets, write in the style of internet poets, write frost-length sonnets on how pink her lips are.Â
write bad. write worse. write bottom-of-the-barrel, and then keep scraping it. keep digging in it. god, how many people are too scared of being bad that they just. never get around to it. that they never even start doing it. what if all they have to say is silly shit about lost love or greek myths or a good kiss. what if theyâre bad at it.
be bad at it. do you know how fucking rebellious and wonderful that truly, i mean truly is? and thatâs poetry, man. the act of being so vulnerable, youâre willing to completely suck at it. big ideas in small boxes. it takes a long time before you get the packaging to fit.Â
go write bad poetry. i canât wait to read it.
Literary history that happened on 28 March
Okay, so youâve been called smart all your life. As a kid, you were one of the smartest in your class. Maybe you could read at a much higher level than your peers, or you could fly through multiplication drills like they were nothing. Then, you get to high school and suddenly youâre surrounded by lots of people who were âgifted kidsâ. None of what made you âspecialâ seems all that important now. Your work is actually challenging, and itâs actually requiring effort.
If youâre experiencing this, just know that so many students have gone through the same thing. Maybe it happens in high school, maybe college. But a lot of us who were considered gifted as kids suddenly run into this and it challenges our entire identity. It can be paralyzing, but itâs 100% possible to overcome it and succeed! Iâve compiled a few tips for ex-gifted kids dealing with impostor syndrome and self-doubt. Iâm not a therapist, psychologist, or any sort of education expert. Iâm just speaking to my own experiences, and I welcome any input from others who have insight into this as well!
1. Understand that working hard does not mean you arenât intelligent. If something doesnât come naturally to you, thatâs not a reason to give up. Believing that people can do things âjust because they were born with a talent for itâ is only going to hurt you. Itâs not true! People may have natural aptitudes for things, but hard work is involved even for the smartest or most talented people. You are capable of learning anything, and you donât have to be âgood at itâ right away to do so.
2. Comparison will kill you. You are your only competition. Focusing on how you rank with other students, and comparing yourself to your classmates is going to exhaust you. By focusing on others, you canât put your full energy into focusing on your work and yourself. You belong. Even if you struggle with your work, you belong. Focus on your own self-improvement and doing your best.
3. Donât focus on the goal, focus on your current actions. If youâre always thinking about the future, and about whether youâll get into that school or that program or win that award or get that scholarship, youâre not using that time to get work done. Donât worry about college applications, just do your homework. Focus on what you are doing now to reach your goals so you can apply to schools with confidence later.
4. Your grades may not reflect intelligence, but they do reflect work ethic. Donât let others convince you that grades mean nothing. They sure as hell mean a lot to colleges, and thinking that you should âreject the current education systemâ is not going to harm anyone but yourself. If you donât feel like youâre learning anything in your high school classes, thatâs all the more reason to want to get into a university that will challenge you. If you put effort into your work, it will not let you down. Your hard work will be reflected on your transcript. Donât lose focus.
5. Talk to someone. Let people know if youâre struggling. It can be hard to feel like you arenât allowed to identify as âsmartâ or to feel pressure to constantly compete and improve. I went to a highly competitive high school that pushed kids to cope in dangerous ways. This is not healthy and not okay. If youâre feeling overwhelmed you need to find healthy coping mechanisms. Speak with someone you trust and donât let yourself spiral. Donât try to self medicate. Your well being is always more important than your grades. Period.
6. Enjoy yourself. School may seem like hell, and you may feel like it will never end and youâll always be stressed and worried. But high school is only four years, and you can do things during that time that you probably wonât ever again. Take advantage of things that seem fun, even if people think theyâre nerdy or weird. Try and remind yourself that youâre lucky to have your education and you have the power to do great things with it. Donât lose sight of your own ability and your bright future!
You need motivation to study? Let me introduce you to spiteful studying. When you study a subject to prove someone wrong. When you spend hours writing up notes so that you can get that grade and smile smugly at the teacher who predicted you a lower grade. Find someone to prove wrong, it can be a teacher, a parent, friend or just to prove society that youâre so much more capable then they say you are!
Trust me, it works.
my masterpost | my studygram | ask me anything
[click image for high quality]
Other advice posts that may be of interest:
How To Stop Procrastinating
How To Study When You Really Donât Want To
Active Revision Techniques
my masterpost | my studygram | ask me anything
[click images for high quality]
Other advice posts that may be of interest:
How To Stop Procrastinating
How To Study When You Really Donât Want To
Active Revision Techniques
Two job-hunting resources that changed my life:
This cover letter post on askamanger.com. A job interview guide written by Alison Green, who runs askamanager.
Shout-out to @ms-demeanor for putting these on my dash again, Iâd like to add this exceptional interview question âanswer guideâ that explains traps and âthe bestâ way to answer over 64 common questions. I donât know who to attribute it to, but here it is: PDF from tri valley one-stop career center.
THANK YOU FOR PUTTING IT INTO WORDS
I donât even want to be rich, I just want to have/make enough money to feel safe and live comfortably...
i canât believe weâre all young professionals and academics and weâre still logging on to tumblr.com every single day to clown on ourselves. who let this happen
Look man this is the only place left im allowed to say clown shit without it impacting my career, just lemme have this
I wish everyone would admit that classic literature is inherently difficult to read, and that you shouldnât feel stupid if you donât âget itâ. Especially the dark academia/ classic lit fandoms and stuff. Like unless you have the vocabulary and pop culture knowledge of an 18th century nobleman, itâs going to be a tough read. Itâll take you longer to read; youâre not stupid if youâve spent several months on a single book! And you donât have to enjoy everything. Itâs okay if you got bored after one chapter of Wuthering Heights, and couldnât be bothered to read the rest. Itâs okay if you want to read your favourite kids book for the 10th time instead. Youâre not stupid. No piece of literature is inherently better, more âimportantâ, more âmeaningfulâ, or more âintellectualâ than another. First and foremost, read what brings you joy.
HOLY SHIT THANK YOU. Itâs a loaded game when the rules benefit only the people who made them.