prom for the losers
[via Pintrest & obscureclouds.com]
iâve been saying this to myself this morning and iâm going to say it to you in case you need to hear it: you are not here to be physically attractive. that is not your purpose. you are here to learn new things and be kind to people and listen to your favorite music and pet cute dogs and read big books and drink good coffee. you are here to see beauty in the world and create it when you canât find any. you are not here to impress people with how you look.
if the secret history was a netflix show
i made this over a year ago and itâs just been sitting in my drafts so here you go
Dark Academia Moodboardâď¸.
Make your room like an old library! keep it dimly lit, have books in every corner, have a few marble busts, invite the ghost of a victorian woman who died in a tragic accident to be your roommate!
So as you all know Iâve been back to uni for about two weeks now and I was NOT feeling it (to say the very least). So here is what I did to get out of that crappy omg I canât believe schoolâs back mood:
Clean your room: Back to school shopping is a huge deal for me but personally I like to start by cleaning my room, that includes closet, desk .. etc. Not only does this give you kind of a fresh start but also you end up figuring out exactly what you have and donât have so you buy way less stuff (and save more money)
And while youâre at it stop hoarding: Iâve had books just sitting there for nearly four years that I havenât touched (hello histology), same goes for clothes. Get rid of the things you know you donât use. If you havenât used them in a year chances are you wonât magically change your mind and start using them. You can sell them or give them away.
Donât throw away half used notebooks: This annoys me soooo much. Cut out the pages youâve written in and RECYCLE them. Less is more people. You donât have to use them for school, I use those for writing down workouts or tracking what I eat, making shopping lists, goals or whatever I feel like writing (so people wonât see you with the same notebook from last year, they probably wonât notice anyway but if thatâs your excuse here you go) ALSO: For clothes that you like but are too long, too big or whatever get them tailored! Donât throw those away too.
Now that weâve decluttered, make a list of what you need: Tailor this to your schedule as much as possible. If you have long days at uni with a significant amount of walking maybe invest in comfy shoes, if you feel like a certain notebook would work really well for a certain class get it, if you know youâll be carrying a lot of stuff around and donât have a proper backpack get one. Write down everything you need before you go to the store.
Figure out what youâll do regarding your meals: Do you have enough good quality tupperware? Do you have all the groceries? Watch a few videos on meal prepping and have a set list of quick and healthy meals that suit you and your schedule and your diet.
Optimize your study space: Iâm not saying make it all white and aesthetically pleasing (unless thatâs your thing), just make sure itâs a good environment for you to be productive. Figure out if you need to make any changes to it before school starts.
If you can rearrange the furniture in your room: Youâd be surprised at how much this affects your mood, you donât have to buy new stuff to feel renovated for back to school.
Take a look at all of your classes and try to work out a daily (& study) routine: SUPER IMPORTANT, before school starts try to plan out what your weeks will look like, what youâll do for certain gaps (for example do you have enough time to go study off campus or get a workout in), which resources youâll use for every class, how are you going to commute, what kind of notes youâll take for every class ..etc. Distribute your workload evenly throughout the week (so days when you go home early, allocate more study time and vice versa)
Lurk at studyblrs and studygrams: or even start one, this community is super motivating (pretty sure you already know that)
One last pampering session: This is very very optional and not for everyone but I personally get a hair treatment done before uni so that I donât spend as much time doing my hair in the morning. Same goes for body hair removal, face masks âŚetc. It just makes me feel like a new woman đđźââď¸
Bill Hader as Richie Tozier in It: Chapter Two being iconic⢠[ 1 / 2 ]
and gay af
bonus:
-Everyone is so fucking weirdly competitive. If you think public schoolers are competitive, just wait until you see homeschoolers play capture the flag.
-Everyone is either Vegan, Christian, Conservative, and will yell at anyone who doesnât follow social norms or theyâre some form of LGBT+, cool with fucking everything, and have dyed hair and Mohawks and shit. Iâve literally never seen an in between in my entire fucking life.
-You forget that everyone you know isnât also homeschooled. Youâre just so used to it that people being in public school seems odd and surreal.
-âWHAT THE FUCK IS WRONG WITH YOU PUBLIC SCHOOLERSâ
-âWhat school do you go to?â
-âWhat grade are you in?â
-most of your day is taken up by waiting for all your public schoolers friends to come home. Its extremely boring.
-You sleep in until like 1 pm and die every time you have to get up before like 11 am because thatâs early for you.
-âoh my God so do you like, do school in your pajamas?â
-âoh my god so do you like, eat lunch whenever you want?â
-âoh my god how you like, make any friends?â
-co-ops
-the list goes fucking on
Bee Warmups
GOOD STUDYING
Use recall. When you look at a passage and try to study it, Â look away and recall the main ideas. Try recalling concepts when you are walking to class or in a different room from where you originally learned it. An ability to recallâto generate the ideas from inside yourselfâis one of the key indicators of good learning.
Test yourself. On everything. All the time. Flashcards are your best friend. Use quizlet if you donât want to hand-make flashcards. Get somebody to test you on your notes.
Space your repetition. Spread out your learning in any subject a little every day, just like an athlete. Donât sit and study one subject for 2 hours, do half an hour every day.
Take breaks. It is common to be unable to solve problems or figure out concepts in math or science the first time you encounter them. This is why a little study every day is much better than a lot of studying all at once. When you get frustrated, take a break so that another part of your mind can take over and work in the background. You need breaks in order for your brain to retain the information. Try the Pomodoro method if you have trouble timing breaks!
Use simple analogies. Whenever you are struggling with a concept, think to yourself, How can I explain this so that a ten-year-old could understand it? Using an analogy really helps. Say it out loud, like youâre teaching it, whether itâs to an imaginary class or your sister who couldnât care less. Â The additional effort of teaching out loud allows you to more deeply encode.
Focus. Turn off your phone / iPad / any distractions and clear your desk of everything you do not need. Use apps like Forest if you canât stay off them!
Do the hardest thing earliest in the day, when youâre wide awake and less likely to push it aside.
BAD STUDYING
Avoid these techniquesâthey can waste your time even while they fool you into thinking youâre learning!
Passive rereadingâsitting passively and running your eyes back over a page. This is a waste of time, frankly, and doesnât do anything to help information pass into your brain without recall.
Over-highlighting. Colouring a passage of text in highlighter isnât helpful at all. Itâs good for flagging up key points to trigger concepts and information, but make sure what you highlight goes in.
Waiting until the last minute to study. DONâT CRAM!!!
Doing what you know. This isnât studying! This is like learning how to juggle but only throwing one ball.Â
Neglecting the textbook. Would you dive into a pool before you knew how to swim? The textbook is your swimming instructorâit guides you toward the answers.Â
Not asking your teachers for help. They are used to lost students coming in for guidanceâitâs their job to help you.Â
Not getting enough sleep. Your brain practices and repeats whatever you put in mind before you go to sleep, as well as retaining information and repairing itself. Prolonged fatigue allows toxins to build up in the brain that disrupts the neural connections you need to think quickly and well.Â
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