This seems like such a silly write up, but I’m noticing that it’s not as easy for me to complete a task unless I’m at the absolute limit of time to where it needs to get done. For example, I needed to study for an exam over the course of a week…I just started today, and the exam is tomorrow 💀. I have 4 chapters to read to and just finished the 1st :').

On one hand, I think having that kind of sense of urgency is good when you’re dealing with an “emergency”, but like…its not really ideal to constantly be in “emergency” mode. Besides the obvious answer of doing stuff early, how do I stop doing this 😦…

  • @redtea
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    136 months ago

    First thing. This isn’t silly. Lots of people struggle with this. Me included.

    Second thing. If you’ve got an exam tomorrow, now is the emergency! Come back after the exam and I’ll give you some tips. For now, you have other priorities.

  • Sickos [they/them, it/its]
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    fedilink
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    106 months ago

    Not trying to diagnose you from a paragraph on the internet, but that’s an ADHD symptom. Even if you don’t have it, you’ll find many many folks in the same boat if you look at ADHD forums; and, similarly, lots of coping strategies on ADHD help sites.

    • JoeMarx 193
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      36 months ago

      I’m sick of people faking disorders which is why I support free healthcare

  • @LeftoverSoup
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    56 months ago

    I find that when there are others involved in a project, I tend to be much more productive. I don’t know if it’s fear of disappointing other people, but just having people relying on me doing my part makes my not wait til the last minute

  • @bloubz
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    56 months ago

    Maybe you can try setting intermediary goals. For example, for the second day of the week you have to know and be able to sum up the first chapter. If this does not work, you can try adding external people to it: you set up a fake exam with your friend where they ask you questions about the first chapter and give you a grade

  • @Addfwyn
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    56 months ago

    I used to be that way back school, I ended up procrastining so much that I write my entire grad school thesis in the last two-three months of my final year. I got it done, and done surprisingly well, but it was a miserable experience.

    I have since learned myself better, and I know that when I have a task that pops into my head just to do it immediately. “Oh, I will do it at X time later today” isn’t going to happen, and I know now I am just lying to myself if I try to do that. If I get started right away, I have no real issue finishing it.

    Personally, things like “to-do” lists are just an excuse to not do things right away for me, so I don’t typically use them outside of a “waiting to hear back from another person” type of pending task. I just do everything as soon as I possibly can; it has the weird effect of me having a lot of idle time at work now because I tend to finish things very early on.

  • @redtea
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    26 months ago

    I’m back. Did you manage okay in your exam?

    (I’m assuming you’re an adult student. If that’s not the case, you might have to tweak this advice.)

    Some of this comes down to discipline, some to time management, some to motivation. If we have all three, things like this are supposed to be easier. Personally, I can struggle with them.

    The trick for me is to set up an environment where neither is needed. Some things just need to be done. Some of those things are easier or more difficult than others. Setting things up so that you make a start and do something is key.

    Two rules. One, you need to study for three hours a day. Maybe four. That’s all. It’s a lot more manageable to try to find two blocks of 90–120 minutes than to face the intimidating and fight-or-flight thought of ‘all day’. And it’s plenty, so long as you’re consistent. Which you will be because you can do it. And once you do it, you’ll find that most days you’ll do even more.

    Two, you’ll finish almost everything you start. But starting is really redacted hard. The blank page or screen. The brand new textbook. So you need a few techniques to overcome this. So that all you have to do is something easy. A few tips:

    • You no longer read books cover to cover or start to finish. The same goes for chapters and articles.
    • From now on you take a brief look at the abstract/intro, then you read the headings, then skim the conclusion. Then, maybe , you skim a bit more of the text. If you’re up to it, you can read a few paragraphs or a section or two that caught your eye. Only then do you read the rest. Then you can re-read whichever parts you need to clarify or need to know in more depth.
    • From now on you don’t start writing from a blank page. You need a blank page at some point. But it’s not to start writing. It’s to scribble or type a few notes. Not in full sentences. A word or two. That should do it. You can come back later to manipulate those few words into sentences, a paragraph, a section.
    • For every chapter/article/book that you read, write one short paragraph to summarise it. This is to help you remember the content. And when you have to write something in more depth, you can copy or type up this paragraph into the blank document from the previous bullet point. Aim to write one or two of these short paragraphs a day.
    • Procrastination. It’s going to get you. Good. Let it. You aren’t going to do that most important thing on your list. Avoid it like the plague. If you don’t control it, though, this will mean tidying your desk/bag/sink or browsing social media. Unfortunately those are as important as task Number One. So you’ll have to procrastinate not to do those things, too. Luckily, the paragraph summaries I mentioned above are much lower down your list. Great way to avoid what you ‘should’ be doing. You’re just doing this for you. Because you’re curious.

    Can I ask, without doxing yourself, what your studies look like? Do you e.g. have a lecture and a seminar on a different topic each week, followed by an exam every term or something like that? One thing to help you enter ‘emergency’ zone more readily is to understand that you’re supposed to do the seminar reading before the lecture. That’s your new goal. They probably don’t tell you that. But that’s how you get a 4.0 GPA. It’s an unstated rule. Now you know, you convince yourself that your deadlines are weekly or however frequently you’re lectures are, not termly.

    You’ll find that if you can find a way to start, to take the pain out of starting and making that as easy as possible, you’ll start to get on top of everything and your discipline and time management will resolve themselves. Your motivation will pick up, too, as the more you learn about a topic, the more you’ll want to know. For the sake of knowing, rather than because you have to.

    Hopefully this helps. Or at least gives you some food for thought.

    • @IdliketothinkimsmartOP
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      26 months ago

      Hi thanks for the lengthy write up!

      I definitely bombed the test 🥴… Im gonna withdraw from the class because I’d rather not get dragged down by the grade. It sucks because I was already late to the class by like 2 weeks, so it was constant catch up on top of organizing, the gym, and hanging out. I bombed 3/3 exams and missed a few in person labs, so yeah…

      I definitely wasn’t watching the lecture or even the book until a test came around the corner smh. I can’t even really say other things took priority because a lot of the time was spent procrastinating 💀.

      I had a standard lab with lecture broken up over the course of a week, and other asynchronous classes. The in person was the main blunder.

      • @redtea
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        26 months ago

        You’re welcome and you’ll do better next time.

        Studying is hard. It seems easy. Like, all you have to do is ‘turn up’ and learn things as they’re presented to you. It all falls apart in practice, because life happens at the same time. Or it did, for me, at least. I do hope the little tricks that helped me help you.