That's a very valid point. I used to call writing in Evernote, writing into the void.
Though the beauty of any system is you design it. You get some kind of say in what's important. I trust that more than randomly depending on your brain. The brain can be a weird place. I have embarrassing memories from my childhood, I don't know if it serves me anymore, but they're there.
Also, I get distracted too easily, having a list of tasks I'm working on keeps me on track.
I second, second brain. heh. I invested like 20 hours setting up my notion just right, and it's so worth it. It's so much more organize than my mucky/intangible brain. I also believe in the GTD philosophy that your brain is for having ideas, not storing them.
Email: [email protected]
--
I am a Fullstack .NET Developer and a Microsoft Certified: Azure Developer Associate.
My expertise is understanding the full software development life cycle. This includes but not limited to design, code development, server/cloud services, testing, and deployment.
With this wide understanding, I can be productive almost immediately in any environment.
I'm looking for opportunities that will allow me to grow as a technical leader. I am a self-starter and I am constantly learning.
--
Areas Of Expertise
- C#, .NET, ASP.NET MVC
- HTML5/CSS3, Twitter Bootstrap
- JavaScript, jQuery, Vue.js
- MS SQL, EF, LINQ
- Web APIs experience
- Microsoft Azure Cloud Services
I'm 5'5. Working out won't change your height but it definitely changes the way you look. I have a beautiful girlfriend. I also have been compliment plenty of times on the way my clothes fit and how I'm in great shape.
Yes, being short sucks, but it sucks not being born a millionaire too. No reason to be down about it.
If you think being short sucks, try being short AND bitter.
I don't understand why you are discrediting people who are taking the better path to med school. Work smarter, not harder.
There is also short game vs long game. For example, if you cheat on a test without learning the material. You might win the short game, but if that material was important and you need it later you're losing the long game. That said, if the material was just fluff and no one really cares. It's actually smart just to cheat and get by.
I feel the reason for burn out was because I was working on something I don't care about. I don't necessarily think the work was extremely demanding or anything. The problem was forcing myself to work on something I don't find meaning in.
Yeah, for my next job. I'm definitely gonna search for a company that has a mission I believe in.
This sounds like what Phil Knight did in Shoe Dogs...haha. This is good advice. I have traveled to Iceland, China, and I'm going to Europe this summer. Granted those were more like vacations than long term travel. Thanks for the exception comment, I know this statistically, but I also know I'm so far behind some people on HN, /r/personalfinance, and indie hackers. I know, I know... Comparison is the thief of joy. I'm living, I guess I just want more. I want to work on something I'm truly passionate about and be great.
Also, my idea is to onboard small businesses slowly. Maybe, adopting and building out features/tools for one business at a time. Until the project is more completed and I can focus on scaling the onboarding.
Though the beauty of any system is you design it. You get some kind of say in what's important. I trust that more than randomly depending on your brain. The brain can be a weird place. I have embarrassing memories from my childhood, I don't know if it serves me anymore, but they're there.
Also, I get distracted too easily, having a list of tasks I'm working on keeps me on track.