how to actually study
Color-coded notes, all-nighters, endless rereading—most of it is garbage. It feels productive, but your brain isn’t absorbing much.
Effective learning isn't about how many hours you put in. It's about what you do in those hours.
The "Try Harder" Myth
We’re told to just have more willpower. More focus. More time chained to a desk. But you can't force your brain into submission. It’s a complex network that learns best when you work with its natural tendencies, not against them.
Forcing yourself to read the same chapter for three hours straight is a perfect example of this. Your attention tanks after about 25 minutes. We keep doing it because it feels like work, and we've been taught that work is what gets results.
It's not. Smart work gets results.
Active Recall is Your Best Tool
The single most important change you can make is this: stop passively reviewing and start actively recalling. Instead of reading your notes over and over, close the book and force your brain to retrieve the information from scratch.
Write down everything you remember. Quiz yourself. That feeling of "Ugh, what was it?" is the feeling of your brain building stronger connections. It's like lifting weights—the strain is what creates growth. Rereading is like watching someone else lift weights and hoping you get stronger.
I remember trying to cram for a biology exam in my second year of university. I spent a whole Saturday just reading the textbook, highlighting passages. I walked into the exam on Monday feeling like I'd put the time in. At 9:17 AM, the professor handed out the papers, and my mind went blank. All that passive reading had gone in one ear and out the other. I ended up with a C-, and my 2011 Honda Civic seemed to mock me on the drive home. That's when I learned that activity isn't the same as progress.