Reddit Reddit reviews The Year in Space 2016 Desk Calendar, Spiral Bound 6" x 9", 136 pp, 53 Weekly Astronomy and Space Exploration Images, Moon Phases, Space History, Sky Events - Intro by Bill Nye, Planetary Society CEO

We found 1 Reddit comments about The Year in Space 2016 Desk Calendar, Spiral Bound 6" x 9", 136 pp, 53 Weekly Astronomy and Space Exploration Images, Moon Phases, Space History, Sky Events - Intro by Bill Nye, Planetary Society CEO. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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The Year in Space 2016 Desk Calendar, Spiral Bound 6
Published in cooperation with The Planetary SocietySpiral-bound 6" x 9" (12" x 9" when open) calendar - lays flat on deskOver 53 weekly images of astronomy and space explorationHundreds of sky events, space history dates, daily moon phasesFeaturing an introduction by Bill Nye, CEO of The Planetary Society
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1 Reddit comment about The Year in Space 2016 Desk Calendar, Spiral Bound 6" x 9", 136 pp, 53 Weekly Astronomy and Space Exploration Images, Moon Phases, Space History, Sky Events - Intro by Bill Nye, Planetary Society CEO:

u/sarautu ยท 7 pointsr/infp

Yes, but I've learned techniques that help me get around it. (I'm old.)


One of the ways is to realize why you're procrastinating: It works.


But, despite it working, it is stressful. Some things to ponder:

  • They say it takes 95% of a project in the planning and 5% in the doing... this is especially true for a lot of course work. A lot of the time I was procrastinating I was actually working on a projects structure in the back of my mind, sometimes consciously, sometimes not. But once I realized this, that helped me realize it was one of the reasons I was procrastinating.
  • Also, working on stuff at the last minutes gives an amazing adrenaline rush... it's like you're working at peak efficiency. Realizing that I was liking those endorphins (sometimes a little too much) helped me.
  • Also, if you do things last minute, you "excuse" yourself for not being perfect. "I maybe could've done better, but I was crunched for time." If you realize you're putting things off so you have a built in excuse for not being perfect, you can work on being okay with not being perfect, and give yourself permission to do an equally slipshod job a bit earlier in your schedule.


    It may be part of our personality to procrastinate, but I've become more-often successful with getting things done a bit sooner. But when I don't, I don't put myself down. I just realize it's part of who I am.

    It is easier if you work it into your schedule, though, that you'll be spending the 12 hours before your 10 page paper is due writing said paper.



    It helps throughout life (and unpredictable deadlines) to make sure I'm not over-committed. I try to keep my life manageable, and leave plenty of time to day dream, because if I don't I'll day dream anyway, and sluff on my duties.

    Another things is to get a planner that works for how busy my schedule is. When I was in college, I used one of these. Mine was nature pictures. I carried it everywhere, to every class, to work, everywhere. The pictures helped keep me interested and also were a visual help of whether I was flipped open to the right week. I just listed all my projects/papers due on the calendar, as well as any odd scheduling issues I needed to track.

    Now that I'm out of college, I use a task list that is based on the bullet journal idea.

    tl;dr. Cut yourself some slack. There are tricks you can learn to make it work out okay in the long run.