How to Escape:
These days, there are movie theaters, Blu-rays, DVDs, cable channels, and video streaming services vying for your attention. Don’t let them suck you in. Instead turn these distractions in to rewards for meeting your study goals.
3. Exercise and Hobbies
The Problem:
Exercise and hobbies—yes, even good, constructive hobbies—can be the worst possible forms of distraction from studies. What makes running a 5K or writing a novel or reading a book so bad, you ask? Not only do they take time away from you learning the necessary materials for a test, but they also make you feel as if your time is being used wisely. In other words, it becomes easier to justify your procrastination when you believe you’re doing something worthwhile, and that is less time away from the books.
How to Escape:
Exercise works best as a routine. Fall out of that routine, and it can become very difficult to resume. Same with reading, writing, or any other hobby that fuels your creativity. Formal education is an obligation when you’re in the thick of it, and that obligation is set to deadlines and objectives that you must be able to accomplish in order to succeed. To keep your hobbies from becoming a distraction, plan ahead. Look at the expectations of your education, and schedule your hobbies around them.
4. Friends and Family
The Problem:
Spouses, boyfriends, girlfriends, children, and best buddies; they all complement who you are, adding so many positive memories to life and teaching you how to love unconditionally. Good things, right? But as with hobbies, these relationships must be managed to accommodate for education. A child throwing a tantrum, a needy and emotional mate, or a hard-partying friend refusing to take their own obligations as serious as you do yours; these can all derail your progress.
How to Escape:
Communication is key. If the people in your life really love you and care about your progress and development, they will understand when you tell them how important your studies are—or anything else you feel passionate about, for that matter. Being open with peers and significant others will take care of many distractions. You should also lean on them to help you deal with children too young to understand. Without their cooperation, it will be difficult to improve your studies and meet educational commitments. And if they refuse to help, then you really need to reevaluate their places in your life.
5. Internet
The Problem:
YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, message forums, Pinterest, and news updates can be effective tools for education, social activity, and networking, but they are more often than not black holes that suck away your study time. Short videos aren’t so short when you’ve watched 100 of them. Social media gaming can go on for hours. Forums and comments can ignite arguments that conquer days of your life, accomplishing nothing in the process.