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thanks for the recommendation, that was interesting indeed, and useful. I've been trying to think the way the mathematician described in the video for the past couple of years, but it's not always easy
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I guess nowadays I kinda feel like something is "not for me" mainly because I often can't bring myself to focus on that thing, even if I find it fun, but that's a whole other problem
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Yeah I know what you mean – it's so much easier to persist with the feeling of being 'stuck' when you're intrinsically curious/interested in the thing on the other side.
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I really struggle with anything related to statistics, probability, calculus, etc. Anything type theory, programming language design, or art/design related makes me happy though 😅
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I usually feel the same way. I had to take 4 semesters of calculus and it was... bad. hardest part was bringing myself to actually study it. but sometimes even the things I usually enjoy (other parts of math, PL) seem joyless, making it hard to keep a constant pace.
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anyways, I figured I could get better at taking advantage of the moments where I can actually focus and enjoy something
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Yeah I know what you mean! Sorry if I couldn't help all that much! But yeah, I'm in different circumstances to you (dropped out of uni, and am now in industry), but share similar dilemmas… 😔
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lucky you! I wish I could help you with the software engineering thing, but I'm about to start my journey on that. and software engineering seems specially harder to make progress on, as it's still pretty recent and things are... unstructured, to say the least
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I've wondered about how to get better at that myself, but I don't know. I don't want to e.g. read the "clean X" books, and everything else feels like scattered resources and principles that you have to go and find out yourself
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