">Parkinson’s Law.
a task will expand in time and seeming complexity depending on the time you set aside for it. For instance, if you say to yourself that you’ll come up with a solution within a week then the problem will seem to grow more difficult and you’ll spend more and more time trying to come up with a solution.
So focus your time on finding solutions. Then just give yourself an hour (instead of the whole day) or the day (instead of the whole week) to solve the problem. This will force your mind to focus on solutions and action.
Or you may wind up with a better result because you haven’t overcomplicated or overpolished things. This will help you to get things done faster, to improve your ability to focus and give you more free time where you can totally focus on what’s in front of you instead of having some looming task creating stress in the back of your mind.
There are opportunities in just about every experience.
In pretty much any experience there are always things that you can learn from it and things within the experience that can help you to grow. Negative experiences, mistakes and failure can sometimes be even better than a success because it teaches you something totally new, something that another success could never teach you.
How do write a friggin letter to apply for anything
Great, so during the long break after SPM and before STPM I went on the job hunt, hoping that it will give me unforgettable experience and something valuable to recall when I grow up. But things just don't go along, all hopes down in drains. Then I found out that I actually don't know how to write a proper letter to apply for anything. If studying are to ensure us a good career, you are doing it wrong by asking students to memorise a few inches thick books when they are actually really USELESS.
(seriously, who cares about people's blood veins? who cares about how microorganism lives? who cares about the rate of the volume of water in a cone after 2.15s? I need a job to get money to get water, that is all I know.)
Good results really is not equivalent to success
We have a lot of examples to prove that. Einstein. Andrew Carnegie. Napoleon hill. Henry ford. Search Google and you can find lots of it. Good result may show your diligence, but I can see from the success stories of others it is their attitude and ideas that really matters. (Well, hey, that doesnt mean I will be a lazy student)
How to talk
Books don't teach us how to communicate properly and makes friends and expand our social circle, and instead they teach us IMAGINARY NUMBERS. Isnt that everyone knows friends are important to help expand your opportunities in life? Hmm.
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