




How do you stay mtoivated?
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11-15-2021, 03:44 AM
I have been struggling a bit to stay motivated to keep studying. I know that discipline is better and more helpful than motivation, but I feel that I also want t recover some of that motivation I had in the beginning.
11-15-2021, 04:58 AM
Drugs bro.
But if you're not into that, I suggest everytime you catch yourself slacking off, visualise your goals, images you can look at help too.
But if you're not into that, I suggest everytime you catch yourself slacking off, visualise your goals, images you can look at help too.
Forum Owner
11-16-2021, 01:36 AM
This is a very nice idea, basically keeping the eye on the prize. I'm going to try this. Thank you!
I don't know if it is indiscreet and disrespectful to ask you this, but why does it work for you?
I don't know if it is indiscreet and disrespectful to ask you this, but why does it work for you?
11-17-2021, 03:34 PM
Putting an objective, then display the big objective into some small ones
12-18-2021, 06:44 PM
Discipline; Let me tell you a story
Back in the good ole Roman days a few of their allies had decided to seek their own destiny. A Roman is consul his name is Titus Manilias Tritocus (spelling might not be 100%) either way year before when Gaul's tribes in the north of Italy sought battle they went out, he was a younger man then and a large Gaul challenged the Romans at a bridge to single combat. Titus asked his commander to answer the Gaul's challenge, he was given such permission being the smaller man he charged and knocked the Gaul off balance, he won the challenge and killed the Gaul.
So as consul years later he went out and even had his son with him on this campaign with an order that no one will engage the enemy without permission. The armies were encamped closely to one another and scouting parties went out including Titus's son as part of a cavalry force. Titus's son's detachment encounters the enemy commander's scouting party and the enemy commander issues a challenge. Titus's son takes the challenge he defeats and strips the corpse of the dead enemy commander and quickly rides to camp to show his father. Titus after seeing his son and hearing his son faced and killed the enemy commander in single combat says nothing but to sound the trumpet for troops to assemble.
Titus addresses the troops reminding them that there was to be no engagements with the enemy, then praises his son for being brave and tells his son of his love for him then tells him that he broke his command and there is punishment. Titus calls out for one of the men to tie his son to the stake and orders an axe man to decapitate him, the army jeers and is angry but none lifted a hand against Titus. His son's body was treated with all honors of the time of a warrior who fell.
Why did Titus do this to his own son? Simple discipline, had he not done so years down the road soldiers would not perform their duties and they would routinely break orders, any assemblence of cohesion.
So by you instilling discipline in yourself at all points you will make yourself a stronger person, learning to still fight one against the impossible and learning to never quit. Too many people quit for no good reason.
Back in the good ole Roman days a few of their allies had decided to seek their own destiny. A Roman is consul his name is Titus Manilias Tritocus (spelling might not be 100%) either way year before when Gaul's tribes in the north of Italy sought battle they went out, he was a younger man then and a large Gaul challenged the Romans at a bridge to single combat. Titus asked his commander to answer the Gaul's challenge, he was given such permission being the smaller man he charged and knocked the Gaul off balance, he won the challenge and killed the Gaul.
So as consul years later he went out and even had his son with him on this campaign with an order that no one will engage the enemy without permission. The armies were encamped closely to one another and scouting parties went out including Titus's son as part of a cavalry force. Titus's son's detachment encounters the enemy commander's scouting party and the enemy commander issues a challenge. Titus's son takes the challenge he defeats and strips the corpse of the dead enemy commander and quickly rides to camp to show his father. Titus after seeing his son and hearing his son faced and killed the enemy commander in single combat says nothing but to sound the trumpet for troops to assemble.
Titus addresses the troops reminding them that there was to be no engagements with the enemy, then praises his son for being brave and tells his son of his love for him then tells him that he broke his command and there is punishment. Titus calls out for one of the men to tie his son to the stake and orders an axe man to decapitate him, the army jeers and is angry but none lifted a hand against Titus. His son's body was treated with all honors of the time of a warrior who fell.
Why did Titus do this to his own son? Simple discipline, had he not done so years down the road soldiers would not perform their duties and they would routinely break orders, any assemblence of cohesion.
So by you instilling discipline in yourself at all points you will make yourself a stronger person, learning to still fight one against the impossible and learning to never quit. Too many people quit for no good reason.