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No Fluff Just Stuff Anthology 2007 by Neal Ford (Paperback - Pragmatic Bookshelf) $21.03 to $32.95 |
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No Fluff, Just Stuff Anthology by Ford (Paperback - Pragmatic Bookshelf) $10.70 to $29.95 |
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Just Kids Stuff Style Race Car Toddler Bed - Fast Shipping $259.98 to $259.98 |
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VHDL 2007 by Peter J. Ashenden (Paperback - Morgan Kaufmann Pub) $37.50 to $60.05 |
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Just Kids Stuff Fire Truck Toddler Bed $259.99 to $259.99 |
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Whether it is a presentation at work that you have been dreading, or a difficult conversation that you have been putting off, from time to time it’s inevitable that you will have to do something that you aren’t looking forward to. This is just stuff that happens to everyone, and though it may not be pleasant, it’s important to handle these tasks with as much grace as you can muster. The first step to completing any task that you are anticipating with dread is to get it over with as quickly as possible. Putting it off will do no good, and will only heighten anxiety.
Once you have decided to take action and complete whatever task it may be that you are dreading, the next step is to prepare yourself as much as possible for it. By feeling prepared, you will be able to see it as just stuff that is really not that scary, though it could be a little bit difficult. For example, if you must give a presentation or if the task is of the variety that can be researched, be sure to research it from all angles. No matter what the task is, try to think of the opposition’s point of view.
That is a valuable debate technique that can be applied to tasks of about any variety. Research is just stuff that helps in almost every situation. Putting yourself in the mind of whoever it is you will be going up against is a way to prepare yourself on the most fundamental level, and realize what it is exactly that you will need to be researching in the first place. If the task that you are dreading is more mental, than the opposition could actually be yourself. In that case, you will need a slightly different strategy.
Try to convince yourself that whatever the task is, be it physical or more mental, it is just stuff that you could do any day. Give yourself a boost of confidence by thinking about other difficulties you’ve overcome, no matter how insignificant they may have seemed at the time. You will probably realize that you’ve already been able to come out ahead more times than not. If you haven’t, then now is the time to prove yourself. Think of the skills that you possess that could come in handy in this circumstance, and prepare yourself to use them.
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Every student who has ever shared a dorm room or on-campus apartment knows that space is usually at a premium. In the dorm, there’s not much way to obtain more space, and renting an off-campus storage unit usually isn’t in the budget. In apartments, sometimes a basement storage unit, like a lock-up cage, is available to store your extra clothes, furniture, a bike or scooter, your athletic gear, and just stuff you want to have available and easy to access.
Accumulating more belongings is typically out of the question without getting rid of something to make room for it. Even book shelf space can be crowded, and students will usually sell back the books from the past semester to make room on the shelf for the texts they need for the current set of classes they are taking. If a new chair is purchased, the bean bag or ratty old couch must go, and preferably not out the window of your third floor apartment, as tempting as that thought may be!
Student life also brings with it the accumulation of academic items other than books. Backpacks, calculators, notebooks, course packs, lab equipment, and art or architecture supplies might be part of the largess that accumulates. And since all work and no play is absolutely no fun, the pursuit of higher education also produces the felt necessity of acquiring of such items as popcorn machines and pizza makers, video game equipment, perhaps an HD television, and just stuff to relieve the stress that naturally goes with studying, writing papers, attending tedious lectures, pulling all nighters, understanding advanced calculus, and dealing with difficult roommates or nutty professors.
A great stress reliever that most students employ is to spend time online. Social networking sites are extremely popular, and give us a chance to develop our identity beyond our immediate social circle, make a name for ourselves, and get to know people we would not have encountered in a pre-internet world. Being entertained online at video sharing sites, humor sites, or gaming websites is popular, too. Shopping online for clothing, music, travel options, books, athletic gear, and just stuff we need for daily existence can be very relaxing. Saving money by shopping for deals online doesn’t hurt, either, not on a student’s typical budget. Just make sure you pitch or sell enough stuff to make room for what you buy before it arrives!
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