What does all this have to do with you? Nothing,
unless you find
yourself spending two hours polishing what is already an A+ paper
or half an hour searching for that one “perfect” word or an hour
rewriting great notes to make them “absolutely perfect.” In other
words, while striving for perfection may well be a noble trait, it can
easily, perhaps inevitably, become an uncontrollable and unstoppable
urge that seriously inhibits your enjoyment
of your work and your
life.
If you find yourself fighting this demon, remind yourself (frequently)
of the Law of Diminishing Returns: Your initial effort yields the biggest
results, with each succeeding effort yielding proportionately less.
And there comes a point where even the most
prodigious efforts yield
negligible results. This applies not only to perfectionists, but also to
those of you who scoff at the very thought of using a “simple” out-
line or producing a “formulaic” report. You do not have to always be
innovative, dazzling, and creative. You
do not have to invent a new,
multimedia, interactive book report. Sometimes a good six-page book
report that gets an A– is just fine, and that A+ “innovation” is more
trouble (and time!) than it’s worth!
When I am tempted to do far more than necessary, just because
it would be a “cool” solution (and time consuming and wasteful
and inefficient and difficult),
I think of George Simenon, the French
author best known for his Inspector Maigret mystery series—and
the 500 total books he wrote in his lifetime. How did he do it…
and still have time to eat and sleep? Simple—he used only 2,000
vocabulary words (out of the 800,000 plus available to him) so
he wouldn’t have to interrupt his writing to consult a dictionary or
thesaurus. (And he probably
didn’t eat or sleep much.)
If you really would prefer spending another couple of hours polishing
that A+ paper or searching for a website your teacher’s never heard
of
to taking in a movie, reading a book, or getting some
other assignment
done, be my guest. Is the extra effort
really worth it? Maybe in some
cases, but not usually.
Chapter 2
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How to Organize Your Studying
27