l2 How to feel less ashamed of all the fails, corrections and criticisms/comments on my university work, and actually appreciate and learn from the feedback and grow from it.
I was surprised to find for myself that having a really fast moving imagination can be a problem.
Same here. One problem with accomplishing my goals is that I am too good at inventing new ones. So it’s difficult to stay focused on one goal as long as is necessary to complete it. It’s rare to have a goal that feels so important that even weeks later it is still a priority #1.
Can you predict how many hours each of these tasks will take you to complete? (probably easier to edit and add on estimates like “5hrs”, “30mins” etc.)
A rough ordering by amount of time needed is actually very important. I’m not saying you need to be accurate within 10%, but having some idea of what’s likely to take minutes, an hour, a lot of hours, weeks, or months is the only way you can tell whether you’re likely to achieve a goal—or make progress toward it—in a given chunk of time.
usb of parents discussing childhood to give to angela − 1 week
Review PHC essay − 1 day
address hetero sexual OCD
h2 pragmatic agorism? fake passport travel stories reddit aus // fake drivers license stories identity theft police reddit
the institute opposite the park where you had a picnic put on resume
add ‘grade 1’ job on resume
Comment on this guys thing!
l2 How to feel less ashamed of all the fails, corrections and criticisms/comments on my university work, and actually appreciate and learn from the feedback and grow from it.
I suggest just choosing one or two goals, probably from the easier and more specific goals, and then doing them.
I was surprised to find for myself that having a really fast moving imagination can be a problem.
Same here. One problem with accomplishing my goals is that I am too good at inventing new ones. So it’s difficult to stay focused on one goal as long as is necessary to complete it. It’s rare to have a goal that feels so important that even weeks later it is still a priority #1.
Can you predict how many hours each of these tasks will take you to complete? (probably easier to edit and add on estimates like “5hrs”, “30mins” etc.)
The effort taken to formaly estimate that would exceed the time to complete some of these tasks
have you tried ordering your to-do list by the length of time it takes to complete things?
nope, can’t be bothered. Seems unnecessary
A rough ordering by amount of time needed is actually very important. I’m not saying you need to be accurate within 10%, but having some idea of what’s likely to take minutes, an hour, a lot of hours, weeks, or months is the only way you can tell whether you’re likely to achieve a goal—or make progress toward it—in a given chunk of time.
I’ll give it a try. I have updated my original post.