Googling "how to study better" is the new sharpening your pencils. It feels productive, but it’s just procrastination in a smarter outfit. You read a dozen articles that all say the same thing: use flashcards, take breaks, don’t cram.
Groundbreaking.
The problem isn't the advice. It's the search itself. You’re looking for a magic bullet, a single technique that will make learning effortless. It doesn't exist. The endless search is the trap. You read, you feel informed, and then you go back to studying the exact same way. Nothing changes.
What if you stopped searching for the perfect habit and just started building good enough ones?
The Art of the Tiny Win
Big goals are paralyzing. "Study for three hours" is a nightmare. But "review lecture notes for 15 minutes"? That's doable. The secret is momentum, not willpower. Forget finding a revolutionary new study method. You need a system of tiny, interconnected wins.
This is where streaks come in. Don't try to become a perfect student overnight. Just try not to break the chain. Study for 15 minutes today. Do it again tomorrow. And the day after. The goal isn't to master calculus in a week. The goal is to show up. An app like Trider is built for this, turning the simple act of showing up into a game you play against yourself. The reminders and focus sessions are just tools to get that first, tiny win.
I remember sitting in my beat-up 2011 Honda Civic behind the library because the Wi-Fi was better there. It was 4:17 PM, and I was cramming for a biostatistics exam. I had the notes, the books, and a growing sense of dread. Instead of reading, I spent ten minutes reorganizing my desktop files into a folder labeled "BIOSTAT-PANIC." It was a useless task. But it was a task. And finishing it gave me just enough of a mental reset to actually open the textbook.
Sometimes the win has nothing to do with the work.