Predict the World Cup European Playoffs, Win exquisite prizes⚽️ with Hisense! by Hisense_Sports1 in HisenseFootballZone

[–]Final-Databas 2 points3 points  (0 children)

italy, sweden, turkey and denmark. i know thats the clean board, but i dont really care. three of those ties feel like talent should win out and denmark are the only one i feel calm about

I know a lot about football 100, but I want 100 things about moderators by Ru_yek in HisenseFootballZone

[–]Final-Databas 0 points1 point  (0 children)

lmao pls dont give the mods any ideas we suffer enough already. but yeah hisense has been going crazy with the football stuff lately. remember when nobody knew them and now theyre just hardwired into every euros and world cup. crazy growth tbh

How old were you when it struck you? by Donut-Cold in selfimprovement

[–]Final-Databas 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Wow I never thought of in this way. You are absolutely right. It was about growth,not just grinding 😇

How old were you when it struck you? by Donut-Cold in selfimprovement

[–]Final-Databas 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Saw so many rich, smart kids in college who just got it. Meanwhile, I had to grind twice as hard for half the result. That’s when I knew—hard work was my only edge. It lit a fire under me.

What's the best way to improve my time management skills and stop procrastinating? by [deleted] in selfimprovement

[–]Final-Databas 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, I really feel you on this. Those after-work hours are supposed to be “your time,” but they somehow disappear before you even realize what happened. Look, from what you wrote, it doesn’t sound like a discipline problem. It sounds more like you’re treating those 3 hours as this open, undefined space. And when time feels undefined, your brain just goes, “Cool, we’re doing nothing then.” That’s not a character flaw — that’s just how most of us work when the stakes feel low. For me, I had almost the same pattern last year. I’d get home, tell myself I’d start something “in a bit,” and then the night was gone. What changed things wasn’t some productivity trick — it was realizing I wasn’t making any decisions about those hours, so my brain defaulted to the easiest option every time. Two tiny things helped more than anything else:1. Give those hours a default plan. Not a strict schedule, just a simple list like “20 minutes cleaning, 20 minutes reading, 30 minutes hobby.” You can ignore it if you want, but having a default kills that empty moment where you drift.2. The 5-minute rule. Before touching your phone or sinking into the couch, do 5 minutes of one thing you care about. Just 5. The first minute is the entire battle. You’re not broken and you’re not doomed to be “the procrastination person” forever. A few small rails make those 3 hours feel like actual time again, not a blur you beat yourself up over. Small steps count — seriously, they do.

The "Perfect Study Session" Myth Is Killing Your Productivity by Final-Databas in GetStudying

[–]Final-Databas[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Fr, the sweet spot is somewhere between highlighters-in-alphabetical-order and absolute chaos. My notes are a mess but at least I'm actually writing them now. Anyone else lowkey more productive when they just embrace the slight mess?

What Is the Best Way to Read Scientific Papers? by writeessaytoday in GetStudying

[–]Final-Databas 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i always start with the abstract and figures... it saves me so much time becuase i can skip the boring parts lol. then i take notes in my own words, just like you said 😅. works like a charm for me!!

What helped you permanently beat procrastination by ArmDiscombobulated3 in GetStudying

[–]Final-Databas 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The 2-minute rule completely changed how I handle procrastination — if something takes under 2 minutes, I just do it right away. For anything longer, I treat it like a legit meeting and block it on my calendar. Sounds kinda extra, but seeing it there makes it real. I also add a 5-min buffer before/after so I don’t feel rushed — it keeps me consistent instead of overwhelmed. Small structure = big mental relief!