Continuously underlining and circling lines while saying whatever I read out loud was my favourite way to study for exams
Truly it was the most effective
#phm#ryland grace#rocky the eridian#project hail mary spoilers





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Continuously underlining and circling lines while saying whatever I read out loud was my favourite way to study for exams
Truly it was the most effective
100 Hobbies To Try
Update: I wrote this at like 1 AM, so I was kind of half-asleep lol. A few people brought up that there were a bunch of duplicates in the list, sorry about that! I redid the whole list and ordered them alphabetically to avoid any repeating words. Hope you find the new list much more helpful!
Hobbies are a great way to practice self-care, and to have as a stress reliever. As uni students, we often find ourselves stressed out about our academic responsibilities, projects deadlines, and even financial concerns. We need some way to let out those stresses, and hobbies are one way to do it. You don't have to be good at them, you just have to enjoy doing them!
Here's a list:
Acrylic pouring
Antiquing
Archery
Astrology
Astronomy
Baking
Beekeeping
Bird watching
Bookbinding
Calligraphy
Canoeing
Candle making
Cartography
Chess
Checkers
Collecting coins
Collecting crystals
Collecting funko-pops
Cooking
Crochet
Crossword puzzles
Cycling
Dancing
Diving
DIY electronics
DIY home improvement
Drawing
Embroidery
Fencing
Filming
Fishing
Frisbee golf
Gardening
Genealogy
Geocaching
Glassblowing
Guitar
Homebrewing
Hiking
Horseback riding
Hot air ballooning
Ice skating
Inline skating
Jigsaw puzzles
Juggling
Kayaking
Kite flying
Kite surfing
Knitting
Lego building
Letterboxing
Magic tricks
Martial arts
Meditation
Metalworking
Model airplanes
Model building
Model rockets
Model trains
Mountain biking
Origami
Paper folding
Painting
Paragliding
Parkour
Piano
Photography
Podcasting
Pottery
Programming
Puzzle solving
Quilting
Rappelling
Reading
Rock climbing
Rollerblading
Running
Sailing
Sculpting
Sculpture carving
Scrapbooking
Scuba diving
Singing
Skiing
Soap carving
Soap making
Stand-up comedy
Stand-up paddleboarding
Stained glass crafting
Stargazing
Surfing
Traveling
Urban exploration
Urban farming
Virtual reality gaming
Web design
Wine making
Wine tasting
Writing
Yoga
There is a great website for synonyms.
MOTIVATION VS SELF-DISCIPLINE
When studying, most people try to find motivation thinking that this will get them through their study session, or they will see their failure as a result of a lack of motivation. But motivation isn’t always what we need - what do you do on the days you have no motivation? This is why we need self-discipline.
MOTIVATION VS SELF DISCIPLINE
Motivation - a willingness to do something. It is the set of psychological forces that compel you to take action. A goal or reward that you look forward to that will encourage you to study - while this is useful, what happens on a day when you just don’t feel like studying?
Self-Discipline - making yourself do things you know you should do when you don’t want to. Being trained to routinely study regardless of how unmotivated you are - this is what will get you out of bed on a day you don’t feel like studying.
So if motivation is ‘why we should do something’ - self-discipline is more ‘what to do next’.
HOW TO BE SELF-DISCIPLINED
Make a commitment with yourself that you will make studying as your habit. This is super important. Commit yourself to make this as your new habit. Don’t half-ass any of these suggestions or any other suggestions that other people give. Don’t give yourself silly, illegitimate excuses in the process. For this, you can do it by remind yourself on what your long-term goals in life are. Or if they don’t sound rewarding enough, remind yourself what failure feels like/ could feel like.
Set yourself a routine and stick to it
Never have a zero day - 10 minutes is better than nothing!! Do flashcards from your bed or watch youtube ted talks if you can’t physically study. This will help help develop a routine and make it easier for you to cope. Also, by studying everyday your brain will know that the content you are learning should be stored as long-term information so this will benefit you in the long run! However I do want to stress not to force yourself if you don’t have the capacity / energy for it. Take care of yourself too.
Avoid long breaks. Unless you know that taking an hour long break means only an hour, then you can ignore this. But fo the majority of us, once we’ve taken a while out of studying it can be hard to get back into it again. One minute you’re taking a 20 minute break for a snack and some phone time and the next thing you know you’re on Youtube and four hours have passed! To avoid this, try stick to shorter breaks - five or ten minutes for a snack break, toilet break and to check any phone messages. A good method to try for this is the Pomodoro Method!
Build on your productivity, not your failures.
If you come from a past of procrastinating and now feel motivated to change and discipline yourself, do NOT try to do everything at once. Start things slow and in steps.
Set yourself smaller deadlines for your goals like monthly and weekly deadlines - e.g. if you are doing a project, due 27th June, set personal deadlines, like have the introduction written by the 8th, have your literature review written by the 15th, have project complete by the 25th.
Break down the things that you must do into smaller, concrete activities and put those smaller activities in that to-do list; allocate specific time periods to do each smaller activities and put it the to-do list as well; set an alarm reminder for each smaller activities. Say you have to study for English on Tuesday, because for whatever reasons you just decided to dedicate your time this Tuesday to study English. However, I’d suggest that you break down that specific activity (or “daily goal”) before putting it in your to-do list. So, instead of just putting “study for Physics”, try putting “read and highlight Chapter 9″, because putting very general/broad activity like “study English” can actually make you too confused on where and how to start doing it, and make you very prone to distractions in the process.
Know your limits. Self-discipline isn’t doing as much as you can until you break - it’s about having control, knowing what you can realistically manage and getting that done.
Give yourself rewards! I love to have something to look forward to as I get work done! This means mixing motivation and self-discipline. I tell myself after this lecture I can have an animal crossing break or check some messages etc.
Track your progress – don’t forget to put a checklist on your to-do list after accomplishing a task. It would relieve your stress a bit and motivate you to continue doing the remaining activities on your to-do list.
Remove distractions from your study space! Personally, if my phone is out and I notice a notification…I’m gonna check it. It’s human nature! So to combat this, I use apps like Forest that force me to stay within the app while I study. If I know I might get hungry during a study session I’ll keep a little snack by my desk so I don’t have to get up and somehow find something else to distract me.
Just do it isn’t that easy. I find to get myself in a ‘work boss’ mood I need to feel good about myself so I put on a nice outfit and maybe some eyeliner and hype myself up so I know I can do my tasks and get stuff done! It feels so much better than lazing in my pyjamas trying to study.
Be patient. It’s going to be a rough journey, it’s going to be hard but you’ve got this! Take it one step at a time. Start off by completing one task a day, then move to two, then three, and the next thing you know, you’ll have a regular routine where you will constantly be ticking off your to-do list everyday! But remember to be kind to yourself, know when your body is not in the right state of health to study and don’t force it. Only force yourself to a limit, you’ll know when to stop and that’s okay. Just try again when you feel better! Your health is much more important!
Study like a Hufflepuff + aesthetic
hydrate yourself.
do your readings in your comfiest sweaters
have 5 min breaks between 40 min study sessions.
divide your tasks into smaller pieces.
use post-it notes to add extra info or to summarize.
write your own notes and study guides from the textbook
organize study groups
be unafraid of the hard work that studying takes
take care of your sleep schedule. the brain processes whatever you’ve learned during sleep.
be polite and helpful in group tasks.
keeping track of time will help you keep track of your progress.
prepare good brain food or snacks.
have a good light source.
warm drinks sharpen your focus. since you should only drink coffee once a day, replace it with tea or hot chocolate.
have a positive mental attitude, frustrating yourself can be time-consuming.
do not cram information into your brain minutes before the test, doing so will lead to mind block.
when studying, listening to music, lo-fi, piano, string have proven to be effective.
make bad puns that help you memorize names and places.
always put instructions in mind.
tutor someone in need, not only have you helped someone but this is a great way to study too.
Slytherin ver. Ravenclaw ver. Gryffindor ver.
hope these are useful :) -love pika☁️
a study technique i saw on reddit.
pomodoro is a popular study technique and i did use a lot in the past but then it just doesn't work for me now and thankfully i came across this post on reddit! it's called the 50/10/40/10/30/10/20/10/10 method. basically start your study sesh w studying for 50 minutes. then take a 10 minute break. then set the timer to 40 minutes, then take a 10 minute break and so on. by the end of this you would've completed 2.5 hours of studying!!
i found this really helpful and thought i'd share it here!! the main advantage is that your attention span and motivation will be high at the beginning of the study sesh hence 50 minutes will be a breeze and then as your motivation declines, your effort is also reducing accordingly keeping you accountable throughout!!
here’s the doodle i used to make my blog header; as an autistic student, i find it easier to focus on lectures when my hands are busy doodling. i love turning on the mirrored drawing function and creating intricate mandala-zentangle-??? things. this one is my favorite so far.
#Day 19
Damn we’re nearing the end, aren’t we?
Morning café study session started late and went on longer today. To the point where people were there for lunch and I was still in my morning clothes. God. But well, as long as I get studying done!
Planning to finish CNS today with a couple of other read worthy essays from my Paeds exam. Will follow that with some Gen Med refreshment, a quicker flip through than yesterday, the study session and record writing after that. If I do the necessary bit, I’ll conclude with extra Paeds reading :)
Yay! Did all those things today! Fell short in the record sector but I have divided that target over the coming 4 days and it feels doable.. (fingers crossed.
Restocked fruits today, the evening sky was glorious, like a fire burning across the horizon. I was walking without my phone otherwise I would’ve captured it.
Study session was illuminating today. I’m so grateful for them :’) This candle kept me company today ^_^
Got a long day tomorrow- Paediatric Kidney and Blood, all Ortho questions, study sesh, 5 Ortho cases and 4-5 paediatric cases to write. I guess I’m gonna span the cases in my breaks. Write 1-2 in 30 mins between study breaks. So like:
2 hr Study> 15 mins chill> 35 mins record> 20 min break > 2 hr Study and so on
I’m not stressing over General Medicine at the moment (because stressing is pointless) and I’m just trying to go one day at a time. Want to be done with records as soon as possible, also with Paediatrics and Orthopaedics so that I can revise OG and Surgery and focus on my first exam- Medicine!
I’ll go to bed now, will try to wake up by 6 and depending on my freshness status, either write 2 cases or read kidney essay in the study room.
Wish me luck!