Sunday, July 26, 2020
Sleep is for the Strong
Sleep is for the Strong This post is for the MIT students about to embark on finals week. Maybe you still have seventeen lectures to review and the exam is tomorrow morning and youre feeling overwhelmed. Maybe that problem isnt making sense no matter how many times you re-read it and youre really stressed out. Maybe youre planning on pulling an all-nighter tonight and to power through the final in the morning before crashing (I dont know anyone that does that). I cant really tell you how to best learn everything tonight because I dont know you or how you best study. But I can tell you that nearly everyone on campus is feeling the same way, even if they act tough and say they arent. Aside from those few classifiable geniuses, most of us are struggling just as much you are. And, as much as I love MIT, there are way too many people trying to one up each other with how few hours they slept or how many hours they studied. I want to see more transparency here. Know that your friends are struggling too and its okay for you to struggle as well. Head to gym after your first final and de-stress. Avoid the junky finals food and eat well. Take care of yourself. It may seem counterintuitive to take a break from studying, especially when theres so much material you havent covered yet and the exam is tomorrow morning. But go for a quick jog. Call up a friend or a family member and talk for a half hour. Watch an inspirational video. Taking a real, genuine, honest, break can recharge you and when you come back youd probably be able to study more efficiently than before. Perhaps just my voice isnt enough to get the message across. So I have here the voices of 45 other MITers from all walks of life. These quotes are brought to you by Sahar H. 17, founder of the Sleep is for the Strong Documentary Campaign. She and her team have interviewed 45 MIT students and alumni, collecting their stories and hardships as well as their hopes for how we can improve student life on campus. Lets all think about these quotes as we go through finals week. âItâs okay to understand that everyone has their personal struggles, no matter how happy some people look. So, always hugging them, always reminding them how wonderful they are is also very important.â -Aisha Wang âMy PSET or exam was always on the back of my mind, and that really prevented me from really enjoying my free time.â -Alissa Borshchencko âEmotions come first, relationships come first, friends family come first, your health comes first.â -Alissa Borshchencko â[Letâs change] this whole attitude of one-upping each other, playing the game of âhow many hours did you sleep last night?â âI slept lessâ and somehow thatâs good. No, thatâs terrible.â -Alissa Borshchencko âI had to convince myself that⦠at some point, my health [and mental health] is essentially a lot more important than whatever grade I get.â -Anahita Maghami âIâve been told that I need to be more compassionate with myself.â -Anthony McHugh âThe idea of wasting time is a construction in my mind thatâs probably not helping me in a positive way. There is taking advantage of your opportunities at MIT and there is knowing that the social and taking care of myself are also opportunities that I have! Iâm learning that when I go and spend time with my friends, when I take a chance to relax, those are still things that are really beneficial to me. â -Anthony McHugh âAssociating your self-worth with each little task can be incredibly damaging to your mental and emotional health.â -Anthony McHugh âWhatâs dangerous is losing that perspective of my value as a person. Thatâs something that I wish that I could go back and tell myself and really help myself out in those moments. Thatâs something that I really want to work hard to make sure is not a part of my life going forward.â -Anthony McHugh âIâve taken up on the philosophy that as long as Iâm satisfied with myself that Iâve learned the material well enough, I donât really care what my grades will be.â -Antonio Moreno âLetâs get rid of the stigma that you need to toughen up and deal with whatever problems you have on your ownâ -Antonio Moreno âWhen I donât get enough sleep, Iâm useless.â -Ashley Smith âIf in the back of your mind youâre always stressed out and you always have to be working, even if you take a break, itâs not a real break; because a part of you is stressed out and guilt-tripping you for taking that break. That was definitely a very major problem that I experienced at MIT. Whenever I would take a break, there was a part of me that said this is valuable time that I should spend working, and that just really decreased the quality of the break. It meant that I couldnât actually properly relax. The fact that I couldnât take a proper break meant that when I did work, it was less efficient.â -Avanti Shrikumar âI think people should stop glorifying unhealthy amounts of work.â -Avanti Shrikumar âIâve made sure not to set unrealistic expectations for myself. Iâve been trying to make my goal to understand the material, and even if I do okay on tests and donât get an A, Iâm still fine with it.â -Azaria Zornberg âDonât EXPECT to do well easily. If you are EXPECTING to do well in every single class that you are taking, you are not going to have a good time.â -Azaria Zornberg âItâs easy to look at someone else and see all the good things. But, you never see all the things that they are hiding.â -Anonymous âTo the students who are sweating it to much, donât sweat it! Just because you donât have a 5.0 leaving MIT, doesnât mean youâre going to get nowhere.â-Brian Alejandro âI feel like often people push themselves to the point that they never sleep. Itâs hard to be productive in a sleep-deprived state. But, then you keep sleep-depriving yourself even more because you are not productive.â -Carolina Kaelin âAlthough we are MIT students, we should never forget that there is a world that exists out there too. And sometimes when youâre too absorbed with work at MIT, you kind of get into the MIT bubble too much, and you stop to realize that there is a world out there, and there is so many more things that exists out there in the world that are not within MIT. I feel like itâs important to know that those things are out there, and itâs a really beautiful world weâre living in. And you should try not to get too trapped in the bubble, so that you can really appreciate the whole world around you. -Carolina Kaelin âWe just got to stop comparing each other. Be it the number of hours we didnât sleep last night or the grades we got. We just got to stop caring about that. It doesnât do any good. No one ever benefits from that.â -Chacha Durazo âIâve made it a point to get 8 hours of sleep every day. It doesnât always happen. But, now itâs at the top of my priority list.â -Coyin Oh âItâs important to remember that you are a person beyond academics. The academics are an important part of your time here, but thatâs not all you are. You are so much more than your grades.â -Dagin Faulkner âLife is not about your GPA.â -Daniel Wang âThere are times that you realize that you are not being productive because you need a break. Even though there is more stuff that you still have to do, you are better off just taking a break at that moment! And doing something for yourself, rather than keep working!â -Fernando Yordan âNot everyone who is successful went to MIT and got a 5.0 GPA⦠right?â -Jelimo Baswan âThe truth is that you travel and go out and realize that MIT is just one place, with only 10,000 people in it. It is certainly not the center of the universe.â Joey Rafidi âOver time I realized that some things are just more important than performing well in school. -Joey Rafidi âWhatever happens today is not the most important thing in your life. If it doesnât go well, there is probably a million other things that would go better!â -Joey Rafidi âYou start to think that you are really dumb at MIT, and then you go out into the real world, and you realize that you are actually still smart.â -Karen Hart âFriends are basically what has kept me going.â -Natalia Guerrero âWhen people ask me what do you like most about MIT⦠[I say] the people.â -Natalia Guerrero âIf you find joy in what you do in your academics and what you are learning, do it for the joy rather than the grade.â -Nico Gomez âEveryone is different. You canât compare yourself to other people, because everyone has had those different experiences. You canât do that to other people. You canât compare people based on numbers and grades.â -Nico Gomez âWeâre here because we have something to bring to this place. And itâs usually not like âOh, I can take tests really well.â There is something else there. There is something else everyone has wanted to do.â -Staly Chin âI love you guys, and weâre all human beings.â -Anonymous Lastly, I want to leave you with a few excerpts from my friend Fred D. 17 from his blog post, Embracing The Hustle Being Thankful for MIT. I want to thank MIT for giving me the chance to study at a truly world-class research institution. I want to thank MIT for helping me refine my work ethic when it comes to getting mountains of work done in short periods of time. I want to thank MIT for exposing me for so many people from walks of life and backgrounds different than my own Most of all, I want to thank MIT for being hard. Yes, MIT isnât perfect, and you can definitely make the case that MIT can be hard just for the sake of being hard, but deep down, I fully believe that MIT being an incredibly difficult school is a necessary part of the character of this campus. The reality is that for most of us who are majoring in an engineering discipline, we will be working on systems that will involve human lives. So lets all reflect on what were thankful for and not neglect our health for the grade. The best thing we can do for ourselves is relax and take a few good breaks. Take care.
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