some people need to study too often to remember their lessons and write exams. while some others can easily study their syllabus at the last moment and give their exams. some don't take notes, some do. some cannot read their material easily and need help. some can read and analyse a text on their own. there are still infinite number of possibilities when it comes to academia. it's how you choose what's the best for yourself. only you can find out what works for you. not the student next to you or the studyblr you follow.
im so thankful for bread and what its done for us as a society. u can put so many things on it. u can toast it. u can dip it in soup. where would we be without you bread. in a bad fucking place let me tell you
Arts and crafts are perfect for adhd folk bc there's an immediate and visual progress.
Cut fabric, sew it together. You just made clothing.
Put some beads on some twine. You just made jewelry.
You can see your productivity.
Chores are the opposite. Yes, your kitchen is clean now. But you'll cook again that evening or the next day and you'll have to start over. Yes, you vacuumed. But two days later it's dusty again. Laundry done, until next week.
Chores never end.
But arts and crafts, nobody can undo the thing you made. You can hold it up and say "look. I made this. I did the productivity today" and nothing quite beats that serotonin rush.
bingewatching will never come close to bingereading. there is nothing like blocking out the entire Earth for ten hours to read a book in one sitting no food no water no shower no bra and emerging at the end with no idea what time it is or where you are, a dried-up prune that's sensitive to light and loud noises because you've been in your room in the dark reading by the glow of a single LED. it's like coming back after a three-month vacation in another dimension and now you have to go downstairs and make dinner. absolutely transcendental
i love that post thats like “never trust how you feel about your life after 9pm” that shit changed my life. every time i feel bad i look at the clock and i’m like Aha It’s 10:26 PM You Cannot Fucking Fool Me
How about in 2024 we stop it with reading books with the goal in mind to finish the book so you can add it to your list of read books and start reading books slowly and intentionally with the goal to rip it into pieces with your mind and be touched by it and formed by it and changed by it
Sometimes I wonder if native English speakers appreciate how much more comfortable the internet is for them than for the rest of the world
Like, you can go on tumblr and simply read stuff in your mother tongue? Amazing. Go on youtube and you don’t have to replay some sentences ten times to try to understand what they’re saying? Incredible. Look for practically anything on google and know that there will be a fuckton of results that you can read without having to spend half the time looking up words in a dictionary? Fascinating. Make a post or send an ask without panicking that you’ll make a silly mistake or that they won’t understand what you meant? Unbelievable.
My cartoon for this week’s New Scientist. Many more here: www.newscientist.com/author/tom-gauld/
learning a language is like learning about a country’s culture. therefore, one should take some culture notes once in a while. if you need any ideas on what to research/study, take a look below! i might add more if i think of any.
countries that speak the language
common dishes/foods/drinks/alcohols
festivals
cultural tidbits (ex: why japanese uses kanji still)
world leaders/figureheads/etc
wars
history in gen
art
games
paintings
sculptures
instruments
music/genre-related
anything
pop culture
hit movies
celebrities
music
etc
history of the language
make a travel guide
recipes
traditions
holidays
places to see/go
sightseeing worthy/statues/etc
important people
common animals that live in certain country
cultural differences?
holidays they have that you don’t
do they celebrate (holiday) differently?
etymology of words – they can act make good history lessons
myths/fairy tales/ urban legends
dialects
provinces/states/etc
whats it like driving there?
how does schooling work?
how does a typical family live?
common stereotypes
do they go about finding love differently? (ex: is it common for arranged marriages?)
typical sbjs one learns in school
college?
beauty standards
Finding old music you used to love is like getting back in touch with an old friend.
You still make dumb mistakes in your native language. You still misspell things and have words you mix up. You still mishear song lyrics. You still struggle with some dialects. You still don’t always get the grammar right. You still have to stop reading sometimes to look up certain words. You still trip over your words and forget what you’re saying.
Forgive yourself for not always understanding or for making mistakes in your target language - you can’t always get it right in your native, so there’s really no need to pressure yourself to get it right all the time in a foreign language that you’re still learning <3