Everything always takes that little bit longer because I try to do my best and I'm a bloody perfectionist. 
So in all seriousness, I think it's kinda deep how we feel so differently about this. You procrastinate by learning stuff you don't need and I'm always feeling like I'm doing the human equivalent of just in time compilation. What amuses me further is how I can also see us doing
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very similar things but conceptualising them differently. I would never learn something I didn't think I need, but I also am very open minded about what "need" means. So I can also imagine us learning the same thing but describing it dramatically differently.

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@thenamesbummers & I were talking about parallels in music. One needs to do enough practice to make sure things run smoothly, but for mental well-being believe things will turn out well and that you are capable. -
I think if anything my mental well-being is more affected by extraneous factors negatively than work itself. I'd say work itself makes me really happy.
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I'm thinking how much is enough work to take the edge off imposter syndrome.
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I guess I'm lucky in that I don't have impostor syndrome. Or if I do it's certainly not tied to how much work I do. I've thought of impostor syndrome, for me, as ever manifesting due to me not doing enough work. Interesting.
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*never thought of
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I also know that the longer I spend on a job the longer it'll take. If I leave it to the, usually well judged, last minute I can spend time doing other things.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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