Sorry about the loud background music! I completely crashed my laptop with this heavy edit, and after a few rounds of failed exports, I gave up trying to figure out how loud it was and just went ahead - I now realise it really should’ve been lower, but oh the bright side, and no background music at all, here’s my video on how I organise my digital workspaces and your free link to try SigmaOS too: go.sigmaos.com/elizabeth xx
@byejesper Жыл бұрын
the edit turned out BEAUTIFUL! thanks for your dedication, the most important aspect of this video for me was the high stimulation tasks combined with high stimulation rewards, I finally understood why I’m so exhausted all the time, even when i’ve had enough breaks scheduled in
@TravelerSanna Жыл бұрын
Ever changing from teenage years to adulthood/business owner In primary school I would use a 45 minutes of study(non STEM subject like English or history) and 15 minutes of reward/play Rewards would be (usually two or more of these at one time) 15 min walk 15 min call my Dad if he was traveling for business 15 min a piece of Cadbury chocolate after I drank 3 glasses of H20 15 min on social media 15 min playing the violin 15 min watching Netflix or Hulu 15 min file nails or beauty mask Any STEM subject which I love my blocks of study were 90 minutes to 2 hours blocks. Rewards would be eating dinner, cleaning my room, organizing anything in my room or adding to my Amazon to buy lists, taking a quick shower after some yoga, doing my hair, cleaning my contacts, speaking to a friend or listening to music these are examples of “rewards” that would not last longer than 30 minutes. This was mainly in high school. Larger rewards were due to any achievements from good grades to a reward or prize I may have won so my rewards were going to plays, art festivals, or music concerts with my friends or parents or volunteering at a festival I considered a reward. Buy a dress or outfit online was a reward I gave myself. In my teens I started investing money from my Ebay store with the help of my father so going online and researching stocks and mutual funds were fun for me and I considered it a reward to research it. Going sailing with my father was a treat and reward for me. Going to the beach was a reward too. I was obsessed with skiing and snowboarding in college so this was my reward going on ski trips for 3 to 4 days at a time once I completed my studies or make the grade. As an adult I “reward” myself once business goals and tasks are completed from paperwork for the lawyers to vet to hiring staff approvals are completed to accomplishing financial goals. My rewards now are planning and going on solo to small group trips with my friends to different places in the world. I enjoy traveling and volunteering. I tutor children twice a week online and this has been one of my greatest rewards. I fell into this by the urging of a friend and it has been an extraordinary experience. I share your videos with children from the precocious 8 year olds to the shy unassuming teens. They love and adore your channel and have put many of your tools for study, learning and efficiency into practice. Bless you! ❤❤
@Gracefullcadence Жыл бұрын
Love how this turned out!! Thinking about our daily actions in terms of level of stimulation and overall energy level is perfect for those of us who have so many ideas, are so passionate, yet need a chaotic (and practically organized) way to express it.
@StudywithMeMBBSUPSC Жыл бұрын
Maam I feel u r doing that hands movement excessively.....still always love watching your videos....they are truly helpful
@skysummer7538 Жыл бұрын
It's good work music 😄 Could you do a few study with me videos with classical music please 😃 I also wonder if you have AHDH but are super organised 😊 I overplan, but have ME and POTS syndrome (Covid x 2 made me 75% more sick) so nothing much gets done and I do not do mornings 🤣 I am going to borrow your big buffer blocks and cut out the to do list 😆 I have to task swap a lot (I would rather not as lose flow of tasks - but pacing) or rest as brain fog hurts and body just says no 😬😘😘😘
@dianakarakulova2517 Жыл бұрын
When I study for an exam, I create a list of different methods for revising a particular topic. These methods include active recall, mind mapping, reading related but non-academic articles, solving past papers, reviewing quizzes, and so on, depending on the subject. Then, when I schedule my study time blocks, I allow myself to choose the revision method based on my energy level and overall well-being at that particular moment. Ultimately, this approach helps me become less avoidant and more engaged in my work.
@truchongviet6979 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this! :D
@tommywalker1631 Жыл бұрын
How did you improve active recall
@Sarah_42 Жыл бұрын
cool! I'll try that
@low-energypolitics56778 ай бұрын
This makes so much sense!
@tulinhvu57497 ай бұрын
Thank you for this❤
@Annaandthebanana Жыл бұрын
I am not a neurodivergent person but I have struggled with anxiety and by extension procrastination. Strict schedules never worked for me because they would just produce more anxiety (via perfectionism). I really like her approach to productivity and have picked up a few techniques here and there that have proven so helpful. Thanks Elizabeth.
@CrisOnTheInternet Жыл бұрын
Same here
@kurootsuki3326 Жыл бұрын
100%
@rosejabbour2480 Жыл бұрын
Im interested to know What techniques have worked for you?
@sushidashi6152 Жыл бұрын
I told my therapist that I found it hard to follow a schedule and she told me to put specific things on my schedule like “study Chapter 4 at 10-10.30am”. It was super hard to follow because of my interest-based productivity. This was much more forgiving and made more sense!
@alexanderbenkendorf688 Жыл бұрын
It's not even my task but, just thinking about how it's formulated, makes me want to rebel and procrastinate. (And I'm almost 40)
@Vibricks Жыл бұрын
ig even therapists don't have the answers to everything huh
@nickorange4881 Жыл бұрын
how do you schedule your stuff now ?
@sunnynacia Жыл бұрын
About 10:19 : Forest has a stopwatch mode ! Instead of studying for a set amount of time, you can just start the stopwatch when you start studying and can end it whenever. It helps with the rule of not having a hard stop time, while still being able to get the benefits from Forest such as tracking your study hours and blocking distracting apps
@yourmomprobably910410 ай бұрын
I love Forest but sadly for the 80% of the app you have to pay for
@nicenspice11 Жыл бұрын
This is naturally how I schedule things and I've always felt like a failure not timeblocking and scheduling the way everyone else does. Thank you for validating this approach of working intuitively and WITH your brain instead of against it.
@nadtrzw7788 Жыл бұрын
right??| I personally switched to doing things this way because rigid plans really did not work for me at all... Like I always felt pressured and unmotivated. Now I do things much more flexibly and my results are sooo much better, I get more done and I don't constantly feel anxious!
@fabianfrankwerner Жыл бұрын
👋 My summary: - 00:00 🌟 Introduction and Background - Elizabeth introduces her hectic life as a medical student with multiple jobs and additional commitments. - She expresses the need to make changes in her scheduling due to stress and overwhelm. - 01:23 📅 Importance of Understanding Your Schedule - The importance of understanding what falls within a schedule is discussed. - She explains how both work and non-work activities impact each other psychologically. - 03:12 🕐 Types of Reward Reinforcement Schedules - Elizabeth explains the four types of reward reinforcement schedules: fixed interval, fixed ratio, variable interval, and variable ratio. - She highlights the significance of these schedules in shaping motivation and behavior. - 05:04 📆 Creating a New Type of Calendar - Strategies for creating a more effective calendar are outlined. - The importance of adding buffers to task start and end times, avoiding strict schedules, and project switching is discussed. - 07:13 🎁 Randomization of Rewards - Elizabeth introduces the concept of randomizing rewards after completing a task. - She explains the selection of reward activities and how it helps manage stimulation levels and energy throughout the day. - 15:49 🌟 Acknowledging Individual Differences - Elizabeth acknowledges the limited applicability of their approach to specific circumstances and invites viewers to share techniques that suit their unique situations. - A closing message of self-compassion is delivered.
@ItsAsparageese Жыл бұрын
Best possible comment my ADHD ass could happen upon while scrolling through comments already during the first 30 seconds of the video lol. Now I can pay attention to the video so much better!
@xenarosey Жыл бұрын
Obviously it's from chat gpt youtube video summary but thanks anyway
@Fran-or3lt Жыл бұрын
Haha obvs GPT
@NailaTabassum-hk8ek Жыл бұрын
😊😊
@szilardhertelendi74176 күн бұрын
Not the hero we asked but the hero we needed
@epistemophilicmetalhead9454 Жыл бұрын
4 types of reward systems: after a fixed time interval after a fixed number of tasks after variable time (when you don't feel like working, when someone calls, etc.) (preferred) after variable number of tasks (preferred) Identify your reward activities: good work done reward no work done reward (scrolling probably) first thing you do in the morning what you do right before you sleep what you do to calm yourself down building your calendar: don't have a hard start or hard stop time give yourself a huge buffer to complete a task start when you want to and stop when you're tired or you don't feel like it switching between huge tasks takes a lot of mental energy. take a short break before you start with the next task don't schedule specific tasks. let it just be study, work, etc. know your energy levels and work accordingly the special effects: choose a set of reward tasks and choose one task as your reward randomly (to maintain that novelty) let the nature of the reward be complementary to your work. (if studying for you is reading a book alone, get out and socialize as a break)
@EverGreenElephant Жыл бұрын
This video is so important! I'm tired of these productivity youtubers saying "put EVERYTHING into your calendar"! This usually does not work for most jobs and activities (only for youtubers, I guess...). This video, however, gives a really helpful KNOWLEDGE of how motivation works and how we can make our calendar work. Thanks!
@carlykit2975 Жыл бұрын
I'm a parent and still helpful. Spent not understand why I couldn't be disciplined like other people. Didn't know about interest driven nervous system. Chile now I'm not scared of my life and actually start cultivating excellence. Thanks for these videos
@katrinawinter5645 Жыл бұрын
Can definitely relate to what you are saying. It always baffled me how people can be so disciplined and push through pain/boredom
@wonkybeautiful Жыл бұрын
Scared of my life, what a good description. I’m also a parent and also found this very helpful. This is going to sound terrible but I find that I’m always so busy with ‘have to’ tasks that my family is often on the short end. I’m going to make spending quality, down-on-the-floor with my kids a reward.
@PiaJKJ11 ай бұрын
I'm also a parent and can't work out how to structure my interest-driven preferences around the routine my kids need. Any ideas?
@kitpyles6 ай бұрын
@@PiaJKJ Start by considering the absolute requirements of their routine. The things that the world ends if they don't happen. (Parents will understand what I mean.) Then, see how much of that you can delegate to your kids. Takes some of it off your plate, & teaches them valuable life skills. Then, look at times your kids are already not needing you (like, when they're asleep). Try scheduling during that time frame so that you can expand your scheduled time as they grow & become more self-sufficient.
@katrinawinter5645 Жыл бұрын
I just wanna say that you are a total lifesaver, Elizabeth. Thank you for all the work you do in creating this invaluable content for us. As a person who has had difficulty all their life juggling multiple commitments and staying organised, your ideas really resonate with me and encourage me to keep going. I find I usually fall short when I try to implement mainstream strategies. I'm really grateful that you cater for neurodivergent individuals and anyone else who has tried a lot of learning/organisational approaches and is at the end of their tether. Keep up the tremendous work and God bless you.
@hnnhml Жыл бұрын
This🙌🏻🙌🏻
@jeffersonadams8711 Жыл бұрын
One novel tip that always stuck with me, which I read in one of those "How to Succeed at College" books many decades ago, was that highly successful people *_schedule their leisure time in addition to their work time._* That was such a 'mind blowing' concept to me, because neither of my parents ever taught me that growing up. They taught me to schedule my work/activities, sure, but when it came to my free time I could just "wing it" and relax. While not exactly what you're talking about here, this video does remind me of that, and I noticed it _was_ a habit practiced by all of my most accomplished peers at school.
@nickorange4881 Жыл бұрын
oh i think i had that book, but it disappeared on me. that would have been helpful
@handroidcool3532 Жыл бұрын
May God bless you , and wish you best Dr Elizabeth in all aspects of your life and pass all the challenges 🙏🏻
@brindlebucker4741 Жыл бұрын
I clicked on this one because I am a world-class procrastinator. I stayed for the editing. The way you edited this video was freaking amazing! Great work. Great content too, but yeah, really loved the edit.
@carolzapinha Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your existence! I'm in fact a parent, mother of two, and this video was reaaaally healpful! So don't distrust yourself too. What you do here has SO MUCH worth! I hope someday I can help people as a content creator myself and if I do 10% of what you do to help others I'll be proud of myself.
@rubywhistler869 Жыл бұрын
This is exactly what I needed. There might be many people it doesn't work for, but nothing I've been given has worked for me yet, so this is genuinely amazing. Making videos like this for people with interest-based nervous systems and sensitive to stimulation is amazing. Thank you for using your experiences to make these informative videos despite having a lot of other things on your plate! I aspire to be like you and able to do all sorts of things I want to while not overwhelming myself.
@c3manu Жыл бұрын
My favourite covert ADHD self-help channel 💜 Thank you
@ClearBlueSky1 Жыл бұрын
I just thank the fact that the internet exists so that I come across content like yours which is a LITERAL LIFESAVER. My brain works similar to yours and I was already figuring out somethings that you spoke about like the fact that having variable work hours was actually more enjoyable than a very fixed time block to work. But I burnt out easily because I couldn't figure out how to fit in my rewards and noticed that scheduling a reward basically made me not want to do it 😂😂 !! Scheduling for us interest based nervous system folks is practically unheard off and I'm genuinely so so grateful for your content and sharing what has been working for you. Thank you ❤❤❤
@NicaVero_ Жыл бұрын
I`m so impressed by the editing. It gets better each time. Never the same. The videos are like a piece of art. There is a sense of refinement. Gorgeous!
@franziskasandkuhler8952 Жыл бұрын
That was so helpful, thank you, Elizabeth! I now better understand why classical time boxing doesn't work for me and I resonated a lot with social situations being additionally draining. And with your hand gestures. :D I will try out your tips starting tomorrow.
@elizabethfilips Жыл бұрын
OH my, thank you so much for the Superlike Franziska!
@johnsonjo8454 Жыл бұрын
@@elizabethfilips love you so much 💋💋💋🤎😍
@aurelian.st.bellamy Жыл бұрын
the only thing that has EVER worked for me is the buffered time blocking. I make a list of daily tasks, then separate my day into time blocks of “morning” and “afternoon”. I’ll assign the tasks to either of those blocks, and then intuitively do them within that general frame. Even at my job, I’d separate my shift by the hour, and then spread out my tasks within those hour chunks. If I got the task done within the first 15 minutes, hey, 45 minutes of chill time! If I’m half an hour into a time block and haven’t changed the garbages- no worries, it’ll take 10 minutes, tops, and I still have half an hour.
@kurootsuki3326 Жыл бұрын
me too!
@pailines5274 Жыл бұрын
This is exactly what I needed. I’ve been having troubles following my schedule for the last two weeks even though I was super motivated before. I used my calendar more like a to-do list, I thought this might be the problem a couple days ago and it’s good to hear this kinda confirmed! Also love the idea of the reward dice, definitely need to try that!!
@esmaeelhilal15269 ай бұрын
Even though your youtube videos are quite long compared to other youtubers, but i am willing to sit and listen to everything you say even if the video is 2 hours long, thank you so much for sharing such valuable insights with us and putting the time and energy into it.
@SparklesNJazz Жыл бұрын
ironically i have always used this method and never even realized it! i’ve gotten better over time just allowing myself to give into impulses and work on what is most stimulating to me, instead of what i think i “should” be doing. whenever i do this, i immediately fall into hyperfocus and get lots of work done on that task. it’s so much more productive for me than pre-planned regimented blocks.
@salamaissam73258 ай бұрын
Thanks Elizabeth, i appreciate anyone who spread good stuff, productivity manners, study tips... Thanks
@ry3833 Жыл бұрын
this vid is so useful, im part of the target audience bc strict scheduling has never ever ever worked for me but I've been accidentally doing the random buffer work schedule and it works out a lot better for me. Learning about the high stimulation activities and doing the opposite or less stimulating is something new though so super interesting, thanks Elizabeth for making the video!
@annaspeaks373 Жыл бұрын
I barely navigate my time without full time job in a med school. Bc in my case I ought to stay in the hospital whole day. So you are my hero.
@katherinevong5217 Жыл бұрын
u are my youtube soul, idk how to explain how i feel rn but u always makes me feel like im not alone, and ur videos are very good for me when i want to procastinate on one work but also want to learn something from this period of time, best wishes. (i mean i like ur state and just ... im so jealous of how u can manage to maintain this good state
@yalazha Жыл бұрын
Love the new filming background! Probably my favorite yet.
@rambukah76 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for putting your work out into the world. Everything you say on your videos resonates so strong with me and helps me feel so much better about the way my brain works. I am implementing so many of your strategies and they’re making a MASSIVE difference for me.❤❤❤
@sanaishere18 Жыл бұрын
You are amazing, as someone who is a first year PhD student /and/ Autistic/ADHD person. My old scheduling stopped working and I had to find new ways to stimulate my brain and this is exactly how I did it. Never stop what you do.
@Eternal_hope777 Жыл бұрын
I really needed this cause I can’t manage my college life and exams, so thank u so much 😊
@rinciel4999 Жыл бұрын
I love this. I started a new full time job a few months back, and have been realizing I operate in an anxiety-based motivation (a new job creates a lot of anxiety, which is a strong source of motivation). And now that the anxiety has worn off and things started to get more predictable, I struggled to get things done exactly because now they are supposed to be easier (and predictable). I truly needed to watch this to remind myself to go through my day more intuitively. Thank you, Elizabeth.
@liraps04 Жыл бұрын
Im a neurodivergent person and you have inspired me to realize I dont need to fit the way society works. Because of my studies and future career im able to do what actually works for me, which is similar to what works for you. Thank yoj so much for helping me not to feel like a “failure” but just different.
@brittmaragh Жыл бұрын
Love this, there’s more emphasis on focus tracking versus time/task tracking. This works so well for my neurodivergent brain. To add, my schedule is also catered to my cycle. My productivity/focus levels fluctuate depending on the week. So, I try to plan for certain tasks keeping in mind what my energy levels will be like
@camillemendiola3091 Жыл бұрын
I don't usually leave comments on KZbin videos but I just wanted to say that I thoroughly enjoyed this video and how you went through different productivity methods. I've been very interested in efficiency and productivity for a while now, especially as someone who continues to take additional night classes despite beginning a full time career but I've never come across the tips that you mentioned. A lot of productivity tips tend to centre around basically forcing yourself to just do the work so it's very refreshing to see someone encouraging being kind to oneself!
@KaifArslan Жыл бұрын
"click off the video if you're a important-based-work person", line was the best and your videos & schedule approaches are so cool and interesting.
@lilymulligan8180 Жыл бұрын
For me, breaking down a project into tiny chunks helps me because I can easily get overwhelmed by a task like "work on essay." I need to have some idea of how to get started in order to circumvent procrastination. That being said, my calendar does have broad blocks like "work" or "study," but I'll have a to-do list elsewhere of the projects I'm working on, and their steps. I find this format works super well for me. The time block is still broad enough that I can decide what order I work in and other specifics like that, but if I get stuck in analysis paralysis or indecision, I can refer to my list to kickstart myself.
@jesscunn7632 Жыл бұрын
This validated the way that I naturally work best! I have always been a person who works best when I don’t have rigid plans. I almost never give myself an end time for doing my schoolwork and it is the only way I’ve made it two years in so far. I love the idea of making varied rewards, will definitely give that a try!
@neilclay58356 ай бұрын
It's been a while now, and although I waver, and forget this actually, it's one of the most useful study technique videos I've come across. Thank you Elizabeth.
@sbp54339 ай бұрын
Elizabeth, this is the exact study method I’ve figured out for myself! Randomisation reduces my anxiety and makes me more willing to do stuff. This is the only method that works for my interest based nervous system. Thank you for making such a great video about this!
@bellabekanova11 ай бұрын
I'm a mum, and I really found this helpful. I started just adding work times to my schedule and that worked really well for me. I started failing when I would add specific timeslots within that time and try to be rigorous with my task start and end times. this video allowed me to see that I don't have to do that and just think of different time slots I can add and work off a list and be flexible with what I need to do. thank you for the dice idea, you are right, coming up with a sustainable reward is the hardest thing, lol.
@aingosay Жыл бұрын
I think that even if other people cannot fully implement the scheduling that you suggest, they can still take the concepts and philosophies that you offer (as much of it as they want/need). Thank you so much. ❤
@GeorgeNyumbu-j5g Жыл бұрын
Rewarding yourself with the things that you like to do or procrastinate upon after any task you completed, it really helps you to remain productive because it gives you the satisfaction of completing a task but it should given a time limit otherwise you will end up wasting time instead of continuing to do other important task on your list. I can testify that the technique works well.
@hnnhml Жыл бұрын
Agreed
@mansoor3159 Жыл бұрын
Elizabeth your videos are really really so so helpful to me and especially I really really needed this video because my exams are coming💫🤗❤️
@ClearBlueSky1 Жыл бұрын
Good luck with your exams !! I have exams coming too and keep getting so exhausted , I'm so grateful for people like Elizabeth and her content ❤❤
@hudach45239 ай бұрын
Can we talk about the editing 😍😍😍 this is absolutely a piece of art a master piece I've been through the same situation for a long time and it was so boring to study just caz i had to start at some point and finish at a specific one only last year which was my last year at uni too that i learnt how to study "spontaneously" and don't stress myself much about the timing I really liked the concept of randomizing and balance the awards depending on the work done, it is a new but totally makes sense for me
@sareekajoshi439 ай бұрын
Oh my god!! You have saved me after years of negative self dialogue of "what's wrong with me"!! I cannot thank you enough!!!
@annaifos11 ай бұрын
This has been my natural way of scheduling all my life and I've felt so inadequate in it because I've had prepschool teachers etc raving about pomodoro and hard scheduling and comparing myself to type A's in my field (jurisprudence), to whom exact scheduling seemed to come so naturally. I'm so relieved to hear my intuitive way of studying/working is actually legit and not somehow "wrong" at all! Btw, for me, the reward is always knitting:-)
@uslovsua Жыл бұрын
This is may have been the most helpful ideas I came across so far to help my ADHD brain to get boring things done ! Thank you 🙏
@robinhahn6987 Жыл бұрын
I do love your videos, Elizabeth - one of the things I appreciate is the fact I don't have to listen to them at 2x speed: I'm very comfortable with your speed of thinking and speech. My somewhat banal approach to doing tasks I don't like is a "gotta eat that frog now" approach. Then I'll get stuck into it until I've finished the task or it's gotten too hot to continue. I like doing AI (Stable Diffusion) and dislike hard physical work, like shoveling rocks and like that, but even though I'm retired (71, retired from PACU nursing), certain things (projects) still need to be done. The follwoing day I'll go for a day-trip to Brisbane (QLD) or down to the Gold Coast, which allows me to do gentle exercise - walking - to get over the hard work: that's my reward. BTW, the music loudness level was fine, and the choice of melodies quite pleasing, thank you.
@britibhatttacharyya5992 Жыл бұрын
didn't know it was possible but your editing has gotten EVEN better Elizabeth! loved the video
@fatimaallawati947 Жыл бұрын
I have ALREADY been working on these for a few years now, I just intuited them and I am DEAD grateful!! I am grateful that ur perspective existsss
@xx-of8py Жыл бұрын
It's amazing how I found your video right after I started planning my schedule today. My plan felt intuitively wrong, and your video explained exactly what I was missing!! Thanks for all the information. Also, admire your energy, because I am drowning between my Uni work and jobs
@cassandrakragh25358 ай бұрын
Thank you for the inspiration. As a mum, I almost see more opportunities to randomize than people with strict work schedules. While my baby's needs are always urgent, pretty much all my other tasks can be randomized (cleaning, what to make for dinner, etc). I can't wait to try this out one out.
@hnnhml Жыл бұрын
I love your approach to productivity so much! Thanks for the awesome video🥰
@imsugardoll Жыл бұрын
I always feel bad when my brain doesn't really do well with structured productivity and forced me to adapt myself into the box. But hearing this makes so much more sense and it's actually the way I love to work but get called lazy or unorganized. Seeing this I realize I'm not, I just function that way and I should embrace it and use it at my favor
@YestoHawaii Жыл бұрын
thank you!! I never thought about it as an interest based vs importance based nervous system. I'm realizing after watching this video that I am interest based for sure.. love the varied reward system idea!! 🌺 aloha from Hawaii!
@chupapi4335 Жыл бұрын
This helps a lot as I'm a university student (24 credits for a semester)& also have to work for 44 hours a week
@maryspica Жыл бұрын
Genius. I am similar to her and her videos are blessings, this content is so original and so needed on this platform. Forever thankful
@hnnhml Жыл бұрын
Agreeed
@DarkenedRoseArt10 ай бұрын
As someone who works a lot out the house and still study and look to prevent burnout on a daily, I find this video very helpful!
@GlowMilestone Жыл бұрын
I think that last sentence of 'not to believe everything you think' is so true! I apprechiate your completely open unique personality! Thanks for sharing
@Jonesleoni-j3u Жыл бұрын
I've always messed up everything that needs to be handled since I am always struggling to follow a strict schedule. It seems that once I fail to follow one item in the schedule, everything breaks down. Hope this video would save me from endless procrastination.
@rosarioferrer6618 Жыл бұрын
OMG! I love your vibes! The video is amazing, but the edition, pleaaaase! It must have taken a lot of time! It's so satisfying to watch all the edited items!
@Star-jr4ux Жыл бұрын
u posted this at the perfect time i was just procrastinating and the end message in ur video was something i really needed to hear thank you
@yksumanth Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@elizabethfilips Жыл бұрын
Oh my gosh, thank you so much for the Superlike!
@chandrika735 Жыл бұрын
Really, I don't have enough words to thank you... your insights are unmatchable! Thanks Elizabeth!
@lupita.bau28 Жыл бұрын
Thank u so much Elizabeth! Your videos are always helpful and interesting
@adishreeram3805 ай бұрын
i try to incorporate my hobbies into my work. I like sketching, making collages etc, so when my motivation is low i make mind maps or collages related to the information ive learnt, its kind of like active recall and it makes me look forward to studying and revising the content.
@patrickphanthanusorn8803 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video. I always love seeing how other super busy multi tasking ninjas make it through their day. I never put in rewards or fun time into my schedule. I do keep an open ended block of time to work with a task list to do. Top 3 items are need to do but it doesn't have to happen first. Whatever is not completed on my task list goes into the next time block of work. If it never gets done then it's not important to me and I evaluate why I even wrote it down. OS Sigma sounds like it might work for me and my life. Gonna give it a try. Thanks again for the video. You content is very useful for the way my brain works. 😁
@omgleafy Жыл бұрын
this is the only ad i actually listened to and enjoyed!! well done!! downloading immediately
@harioandluigi456911 ай бұрын
With having ADHD, having your content out there is helping so so much
@SparklesNJazz Жыл бұрын
there is no one i relate to more than you in terms of work style. thank you thank you
@JamieRenee101 Жыл бұрын
These are real behavioral terms: fixed interval, fixed ratio and I’m studying to be a BCBA so this is helpful in a multitude of ways! Thank you ❤
@sentencedto7677 Жыл бұрын
@13:30 it's dopamine! Highly stimulating tasks one after the other creates a high demand of dopamine to be released within our brain. There is a baseline of dopamine circulating within our body every day, but after such an event, it drops below baseline. So after a stimulating or exciting activity, you may feel that "low" after the "high" until your dopamine returns back to baseline (your baseline can also fluctuate!). It's a slow process and is based on genetics, so it may take one person longer to return to their baseline than another person. Hence why one person may feel extremely drained and need a day rest, while someone else only needs a few hours. There are a lot more variables to it but that's the gist.
@anastasiasemenova7075 Жыл бұрын
Your videos are so pleasing to watch! Thank you a lot for everything you do
@brandingbyafifa Жыл бұрын
Your videos are always worthy! I was waiting for this.❤ Lovely Queen ❤❤❤❤
@Buttercupxoxo1176 Жыл бұрын
You don't know how much you inspire me and put value in my life. I see you as one of my idol ❤ thank you so much for these amazing concepts
@Rayowag Жыл бұрын
I've never considered how a high stimulation task followed by high stimulation reward could be one of the reasons for the adhd burnout cycle. I find myself struggling to do a low stimulation reward most of the time, especially as the day goes on.
@reddrift3022 Жыл бұрын
Other than the randomised rewards, I intuitively started doing all of what you mentioned in the video after burning out in 2021. Its interesting to see the convergence in ideas.
@selenathesparklycabbage Жыл бұрын
Elizabeth the editing is absolutely breathtaking!!! Incredible work!!!!!! And such a priceless video here!!!
@mcdb7224 Жыл бұрын
1. Love this, brilliant as usual 2. Sigma OS is genius !! Thanks for this discovery
@aurelian.st.bellamy Жыл бұрын
also, I ADORED this video, and your video style. only video I haven’t clicked off on, played in the background, or put on 2x. weirdly helps a lot that the colour palette is warm and muted lol
@jomichel838811 ай бұрын
What’s been huge for me is to track instead of rigorously plan. Because it feels rewarding to write down what I’ve done each day & look back on it. I still mentally plan roughly how much I wanna study each day but I get to choose everyday what that should be
@jazzmynh.5215 Жыл бұрын
Already loving this and you… you’re fantastic at explaining things.
@akunJulia0 Жыл бұрын
Has just found your channel, can't hold not to subscribe. Thank you so much for making this video. Have been losing my self for years. This video convince me to just be the way I am
@mercurycures Жыл бұрын
thank you Elizabeth your videos are always the best
@niouk Жыл бұрын
Thank you for mentioning parenting. It feels like you are one of the only ones (if not the only one) to at least mention it amongst "productivity" channels. Most of the proposed systems are not working when dealing with children. I will definitely explore/adapt your solution. Thanks for sharing :)
@elisaferrari6758 Жыл бұрын
LOVE the content, and the editing is a masterpiece!
@make725daily1 Жыл бұрын
You radiate positivity! - "The path to success often intertwines with challenges."
@SulfurOxigenSulfur Жыл бұрын
Morning!, the reason of this message was due to the fact that I so one of your videos… and I love it!! And at that video you said that you weren’t as good at memorizing and that was ok for you, and I thought of the mind palace method that uses creativity instead of consistency, so I’m here to recommend it (you may find it helpful hopefully). In any case I was also here to tell I love your content and methodology because it has help me immensely, thank you!
@heba6184 Жыл бұрын
Elizabeth, I love you this is perfect timing.
@Minah-j1h Жыл бұрын
Thanks for super helpful advice.
@leggermentesara Жыл бұрын
Your videos are so dense that i have to back and forth to better understand 🤯 i mean it in a positive way of course! ❤
@williamlea Жыл бұрын
wicked video elizabeth. just wanna say, love all the classical painting references instead of some graphic logos. splendid vibes
@kli78676 ай бұрын
Congrats. Nearly one million subscribers
@mititi15 Жыл бұрын
You thought of everything even in the description. Thank you sm for sharing your knowledge❣️
@aprbdi Жыл бұрын
Hi Elizabeth, thanks so much for sharing your insight on this. As per usual, your ideas are highly applicable! I started doing something similar with undefined start and stop time for 'work' actions ever since your video about honouring motivation levels. Another similar alternative might be to have one highlight 'work' item that once completed, the day can be freed for other things you want to do intuitively. I got this idea from the book Make Time by Jake Knapp and John Zeratsky. Gotta say this principle is very liberating for a recovering workaholic like myself and helps a lot to reduce unhealthy guilt while resting
@memary217 Жыл бұрын
Thanks a lot for this video, all of this time I have been searching exactly this one, it's something that I was really needed.❤❤❤
@AZearafel4 ай бұрын
epic zoom backround - the paintings are gorge!!!!
@ChrisInmanDrums Жыл бұрын
I gave up on calendar blocking long ago, I realise looking back that I HATED it. My approach now is to only calendar in things that have to happen (uni, work, events..) and deliberately leave blocks of time “free”, in which I know to do things like study, practise, etc. So no hard start/stop times - similar to you I guess but without the actual input into the calendar. I relate to what your life sounds like on so many level that I confess to getting a rush of approval whenever I hear I do something similar to you 😆 My takeaway from this would be a more deliberate approach to rewards, I found that incredibly interesting