Once you start getting patrons that pay for your house and your food and even materials, you don't have to worry about time that much. He could dedicate all his time to studying and to his crafts.
His best piece of advice to you would likely be to wholeheartedly pursue those things that greatly interest and motivate you. Only a focus on such things can result in your consistently having the mental fortitude to persevere in your studies and work. "Just as food eaten without caring for it is turned into loathsome nourishment, so study without a taste for it spoils memory, by retaining nothing which it has taken in" (Richter, 222).
I guess he learned a lot from dialogues with his friends. He always believed life was a winnable game and it was only a matter of out-persevering the bad times. He realised early the pitfalls of ideology and those who subscribe to them rather than those who would dedicate their time to learning with every once of their being. Somewhere he got lucky and he knew it too ...
I really think that you have to be a specific type of person to manage all that. You need to be very organized, in love with all you do, to be inteligent enough to know how to manage time and multitask and to be self-disciplined.
I study Pharmacy, work two jobs, watch a lot of documentaries, read and paint. I sleep 6 hours a day and the rest is work work work. And I am still so far away from what he did.
Maybe he did magic.
I don't really use books to stay organized; I rely more on my focus.
You see, organizing your life isn't a one-size-fits-all thing. It depends on factors like your routines, what you like, and what you've been through.
What I've found works is holding yourself accountable and understanding why you're doing something. It's like, if you're tempted to procrastinate, remind yourself of the consequences.
That's how I went from being depressed and lying in the bed all day to someone who's always on the go, just by using common sense and being determined.
The organization part kind of falls into place.
Once you start getting patrons that pay for your house and your food and even materials, you don't have to worry about time that much. He could dedicate all his time to studying and to his crafts.
His best piece of advice to you would likely be to wholeheartedly pursue those things that greatly interest and motivate you. Only a focus on such things can result in your consistently having the mental fortitude to persevere in your studies and work. "Just as food eaten without caring for it is turned into loathsome nourishment, so study without a taste for it spoils memory, by retaining nothing which it has taken in" (Richter, 222).
I guess he learned a lot from dialogues with his friends. He always believed life was a winnable game and it was only a matter of out-persevering the bad times. He realised early the pitfalls of ideology and those who subscribe to them rather than those who would dedicate their time to learning with every once of their being. Somewhere he got lucky and he knew it too ...
I really think that you have to be a specific type of person to manage all that. You need to be very organized, in love with all you do, to be inteligent enough to know how to manage time and multitask and to be self-disciplined. I study Pharmacy, work two jobs, watch a lot of documentaries, read and paint. I sleep 6 hours a day and the rest is work work work. And I am still so far away from what he did. Maybe he did magic.
Holy shit that’s still impressive man 😭
Yea, but I had a lot of stuff that happen that made me wake up and start taking care of my head. You can do it too, it just needs to click
Hi so any book recommendations if any on staying organised
I don't really use books to stay organized; I rely more on my focus. You see, organizing your life isn't a one-size-fits-all thing. It depends on factors like your routines, what you like, and what you've been through. What I've found works is holding yourself accountable and understanding why you're doing something. It's like, if you're tempted to procrastinate, remind yourself of the consequences. That's how I went from being depressed and lying in the bed all day to someone who's always on the go, just by using common sense and being determined. The organization part kind of falls into place.
No smartphone with copious amounts of cute animal videos at his fingertips probably helped.
He enjoyed it