I’I PASSED SPANISH AND CHEM!!!!
I WINNNNNNN
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I’I PASSED SPANISH AND CHEM!!!!
I WINNNNNNN
29/5/26
I'm going to be fully inactive until 8th of june due to exams!!
mom already told me to study and I have to make my mom proud!! anyways see you!! :3
(if you miss me and/or wanna talk to me for a bit, you can dm me on discord!! my username is happiilove)
Exam Season Survival Guide
How to Study Without Fully Losing Your Mind
Exam season is here again, and honestly? The vibes are chaotic. Your sleep schedule is fighting for its life, your notes look like they were written during a minor earthquake, and somehow every teacher has decided that now is the perfect time to “quickly revise the whole syllabus.” If you are currently staring at a textbook while your brain plays elevator music, this one is for you.
Why Exam Season Feels So Stressful
Exam season is not just about studying. It is about pressure, time management, expectations, revision, deadlines, and trying to remember information your brain swears it has never seen before. Whether you are preparing for school exams, board exams, GCSEs, A Levels, IB exams, AP exams, SATs, university finals, or entrance tests, the stress is real. But here is the truth: exam season does not have to destroy your mental health. You do not need to become a 5 a.m. productivity influencer overnight. You just need a smart study routine that actually works for you.
Romanticize Studying, But Make It Real
Yes, light the candle. Yes, make the iced coffee. Yes, create the “study with me” playlist. But also, open the book. Romanticizing studying can help you get started, especially when your motivation is basically at 2%. Make your desk clean, use cute highlighters, set up a cozy study space, and make revision feel less like punishment. But remember: aesthetic notes are not the same as effective studying. Pretty pages are nice, but active recall, practice questions, flashcards, past papers, and spaced repetition are what actually help you remember things.
The Best Study Method for Exam Season
The best exam revision method is simple: stop rereading and start testing yourself. Reading your notes over and over feels productive, but most of the time, it is just your brain pretending to work. Instead, try this: Read one small topic. Close your book. Write down everything you remember. Check what you missed. Repeat. This is called active recall, and it is one of the most effective study techniques for exam preparation. It forces your brain to retrieve information instead of just recognizing it. Basically, it is giving your memory a gym workout.
Past Papers Are Your Best Friend
During exam season, past papers are elite. They show you what examiners actually ask, how questions are structured, which topics repeat, and how much detail you need in your answers. Do not just “do” past papers. Study them. Look at the mark scheme. Notice the keywords. Correct your mistakes. Rewrite weak answers. Track repeated topics. Past papers are like exam spoilers, but legal.
Stop Waiting for Motivation
Motivation during exam season is unreliable. One day you feel like an academic weapon, the next day you are lying on your bed watching “one more video” for three hours. That is normal. The trick is not to wait until you feel motivated. Start small. Tell yourself you only need to study for 10 minutes. Most of the time, starting is the hardest part. A tiny study session is still better than no study session.
Create a Study Schedule That Does Not Feel Like Prison
A good exam study schedule should help you, not bully you. Do not make a timetable where every minute of your life is booked. That looks productive, but it usually fails by day two. Instead, plan your subjects by priority: What exam is first? Which topics are hardest? Which subjects need the most practice? What can you revise quickly? Build your revision timetable around reality, not fantasy. Also, add breaks. Your brain is not a laptop. You cannot just keep opening tabs forever.
How to Deal With Exam Anxiety
Exam anxiety can make even prepared students feel like they know nothing. The night before an exam, your brain might suddenly ask, “What if we forgot everything?” Very dramatic. Very unnecessary. Try this: Breathe slowly. Do one easy question to rebuild confidence. Avoid last-minute panic scrolling. Do not compare your revision with everyone else. Remind yourself that stress is not proof that you will fail. You are allowed to be nervous and still perform well.
Sleep Is Not Optional
Pulling an all-nighter before an exam might feel heroic, but it is usually a scam. Your brain needs sleep to store information, focus, and think clearly. No sleep means slower thinking, weaker memory, and more silly mistakes. During exam season, sleep is part of studying. Treat it like a revision tool. Because it is.
Food, Water, and Basic Human Maintenance
It sounds obvious, but during exam season, basic self-care disappears so fast. Drink water. Eat actual food. Move around. Take short breaks. Go outside for a few minutes. Your brain lives in your body. If your body is running on three biscuits, stress, and one iced coffee, your brain is not going to give its best performance.
The Main Character Mindset for Exams
Here is the mindset: you are not trying to become perfect. You are trying to become prepared. You do not need to know everything. You do not need to study 12 hours a day. You do not need to panic because someone else finished the syllabus before you. Focus on your own progress. One topic at a time. One past paper at a time. One study session at a time. Exam season is temporary. Your worth is not defined by one grade, one test, or one bad paper.
Final Exam Season Reminder
You are not lazy. You are probably overwhelmed. You are not behind forever. You just need a plan. You are not bad at studying. You may just need better study techniques. So breathe. Open the first topic. Start messy. Keep going. This exam season, we are not spiraling. We are revising, resting, hydrating, and passing with main character energy.
I go to school today, and it's one of my last days before exams start. Exams start on Friday, and I don't feel super excited for them. Not so much because I think I'll do poorly, but more because thinking of the end of a semester makes me feel all existential and sad. I leave high school at the end of this year! I can't believe that! I turn 20 in less than a month now, and I barely feel 18! Time moves way too quickly, and I hate it. sigh...
The only positive thing I see here is that I only have around 90 pages left in the House of Hades, which means that I should end up finishing it just before exams start. And that'll probably be nice. I can then finish the Heroes of Olympus by March, and I guess I'll figure out something else to read after that. Not sure what yet, though. Do I go to Magnus Chase again? Or do I try and read something new? I'm legitimately not sure. But I guess that's a topic for another time, now.
My arch nemesis is near.. (exam season).
Ranting rn
Lifes been so busy and tiring lately. Like I’ve had zero time to connect to my DR and shift and all that bc i have exams and work to do. It’s so much. I feel weird for it. Like I’m unfaithful to my DR and my life and the people in that reality. I hope I’m not the only shifter who’s had it like this. Someone pls relate or understand. /:
I have a home maintenance class in my school, and as review for the final the teacher is just going through all the old slides, so I got to see this gem again and share it with all four people here