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bdaruna t1_j1fy0f3 wrote

We are what we do repeatedly. Therefore excellence is not an act but a habit. - Aristotle

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MyNameIsSkittles t1_j1g24rv wrote

Read Atomic Habits by James Clear. Audible usually has deals, you can pick it up for a free credit with a killer deal rn

Trust me when I say this is the book you want to read for this case. Everything I know about building habits came from this book

Also don't try to do everything all at once. Imo I'd start with the sleep habit since without good sleep, anything else you do won't stick or will be muddied by the fact you're not getting enough sleep. It's more important than a good diet

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edtb t1_j1g7ld3 wrote

Lol my previous boss made us read this book. They started it shortly after I left. But I may still grab a copy and read it.

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keepthetips t1_j1fxrhp wrote

Hello and welcome to r/LifeProTips!

Please help us decide if this post is a good fit for the subreddit by up or downvoting this comment.

If you think that this is great advice to improve your life, please upvote. If you think this doesn't help you in any way, please downvote. If you don't care, leave it for the others to decide.

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4682458 t1_j1fzfu3 wrote

Without more information on what you need structure with it's hard to give applicable and actionable advice.

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Glittering-Sun-4080 OP t1_j1g06n4 wrote

When it’s comes to structure, I mean that I do not have a routine for anything (I’m a college student) No sleep routine, fitness routine, finishing homework on time or paying bills on time. I miss deadlines which is ironically the most consistent thing I’ve been. In brief, I’m a mess.

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4682458 t1_j1g7uj7 wrote

For homework and bills, I suggest a bullet journal, digital or analog (physical journal works best for me. Record due dates not only on the day they are due, but a week, then 3-4 days before and finally the day before. If you don't need as many reminders as I do, then don't put in as many.

For academic work I get the syllabus at the start if each class and work out small, easily digestible increments and set due dates for those during the course.

Ex. One chapter a week is assigned reading so I divide the chapter over 4 days. I build in wiggle room in case life happens which is why I divide over 4 days instead of seven.

Ex. For papers that are due a month out I divide into three weeks: week 1 for research, 2-3 for writing (sometimes I end up needing more research once I start writing, week 3 for outside review and editing (or week 4 if I had to do additional research).

If I find that one day or week is really heavy with tasks I adjust as needed. This may seem pretty involved, but I was able to keep up with schoolwork while suffering a health crisis. I didn't need any extensions on assignments due to planning at the beginning if the classes and a bit of luck.

For everything else like sleep and fitness, schedule it like anything else. But these are things you may want to try to be more strict in terms if when you do them. Sleep schedule should be more regimented in terms of times than an activity like fitness.

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edtb t1_j1g7f5u wrote

I do lists for each day. The hard part is being consistent in making a good list of be shit you need to do. But once you do that and have a detailed list of things you know you need to do you'll work through it. Not a mental list either.

Write it down. Send yourself scheduled reminders. Annoy the shit out of yourself.

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ZanonDF t1_j1gsult wrote

I mentor lots of folks and the first thing I have them read is the pledge by Michael masters on. From there figure out your life goals. I recommend you write goals daily by hand for one year that are positive, present tense with a specific end date for accomplishment (dec 31 2023 is a good date).

I would write more though gotta sleep.

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Veryoldidiot t1_j1ho52o wrote

No goals.

Seriously. No goals = no disappointments.

Look for the easiest way to earn money without hurting people.

It is acceptable to steal from a government or political institution.

Marry a wealthy woman and become a trophy man. That is what I did.

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nostalgiadusk t1_j1hs5n7 wrote

small, clear to-do lists, make small, achieveable goals reward yourself when you reach milestones

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autotelica t1_j1i4wkf wrote

Good news! Since you're a college student, you have access to a counselling center. Make an appointment to talk to someone. You are already paying for the service so you might as well try it.

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BigChirag t1_j1ic5ij wrote

The slight edge by Jeff Olson is a great read for this

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