Most of my online classes are starting; one of them's started already. I'm honestly not sure how many of them I'll be able to do. And I think that it's sucking time away from other goals. I'm going to go ahead and cut some of them back; it's the only way to be sure I can do the learning thing, which I feel is more important.
I do want to keep up with some of them on various days, though. I'll just cut the number of days down.
Days exercised at least twenty minutes a day (any sort): 3/7
Days spent editing novel for twenty minutes: 0/4
Days spent doing twenty minutes of housework: 1/4
Commonplace book pages: 4/4
Sketches: 3/3 (chairs mostly, although I tried a puppy at some point.)
Days spent reviewing programming for twenty minutes: 7/7
Days I wrote 750 words: 2/7
The programming review should be easy; one of my classes is on various programming languages. We're currently working with ML and it's very different from everything else I've used thus far. (Recursion is odd. I'm starting to get the basic principle, but it still runs counter to how I think about programming thus far. How do you call a function in its own definition and not get an error?)
Also, I finally found the commonplace book. Not going to try to make up last week wholesale, or else I'll get really sick of it. I'll just try for four pages, under the logic that some pages are better than none. Surely in a week's time I can find four interesting things to write down. (I already have, but it's just a matter of making the time.)
1/19 - I've had a hard time keeping up with any of these lately, except for the programming and the sketching (which I usually do at work.) Most of my workdays I end up crashing shortly after I get home and sleeping through the night. Not making my goals this week, most likely. Got to keep trying.
1/21 - RECURSION MAKES NO SENSE. HOW DO YOU DEFINE A FUNCTION WITH ITSELF. HOW.
In other news, didn't do as well with exercise or writing, but I did manage to stay ahead on programming and to find my commonplace book. That's good at least.
I do want to keep up with some of them on various days, though. I'll just cut the number of days down.
Days exercised at least twenty minutes a day (any sort): 3/7
Days spent editing novel for twenty minutes: 0/4
Days spent doing twenty minutes of housework: 1/4
Commonplace book pages: 4/4
Sketches: 3/3 (chairs mostly, although I tried a puppy at some point.)
Days spent reviewing programming for twenty minutes: 7/7
Days I wrote 750 words: 2/7
The programming review should be easy; one of my classes is on various programming languages. We're currently working with ML and it's very different from everything else I've used thus far. (Recursion is odd. I'm starting to get the basic principle, but it still runs counter to how I think about programming thus far. How do you call a function in its own definition and not get an error?)
Also, I finally found the commonplace book. Not going to try to make up last week wholesale, or else I'll get really sick of it. I'll just try for four pages, under the logic that some pages are better than none. Surely in a week's time I can find four interesting things to write down. (I already have, but it's just a matter of making the time.)
1/19 - I've had a hard time keeping up with any of these lately, except for the programming and the sketching (which I usually do at work.) Most of my workdays I end up crashing shortly after I get home and sleeping through the night. Not making my goals this week, most likely. Got to keep trying.
1/21 - RECURSION MAKES NO SENSE. HOW DO YOU DEFINE A FUNCTION WITH ITSELF. HOW.
In other news, didn't do as well with exercise or writing, but I did manage to stay ahead on programming and to find my commonplace book. That's good at least.