It's been a while since I've written anything here. The semester is in full swing, I'm still working part-time, and I'm stressed out. That's really all there is to it. I need an extra eight hours in the day, at least. I was reading a chapter of my psychology textbook last night when I came across an interesting concept. The book mentioned that some people are better at delaying gratification than others, and that ability is often a huge predictor of intelligence (as measured by SAT scores in this example, which is its own mess, but still). My first thought was well, yeah. If you want to be the best at school/work/whatever, you have to sacrifice all of your time to it. That's the unfortunate truth of how the world works, or at least as I've experienced it so far. I was "smart" in high school, because I put the work in, but at the expense of literally everything else in my life. I was miserable, and I eventually burnt myself out. I can feel that happening again right now. I can't ignore it this time, though. My general mental state is a bit better than it used to be, so I can actually see the impact that things have on my life. I can no longer use the excuse "oh, my grades are still good, so I must be completely fine!". That's partially because I've broadened my perspective of What Matters In Life, but also because my grades are no longer as nice as I'd like them to be. Oops. Anyway. As soon as I get the time, I'm going to find a therapist. That's something I've needed to do for a long while, anyway. One last random note. The two big computer science courses I'm taking this semester are advanced algorithm analysis and automata theory, and it kind of feels like whiplash going between the two. Algorithms classes are just about figuring out how to do things with the maximum efficency, but automata theory is theory of computation stuff, so we're just trying to determine if the problem is possible to solve or not. We'll be talking about a problem in automata and my professor will say something along the lines of "well, you could technically try every possible path in a finite amount of time, so the problem is decideable" and my first thought is always "oh god, the runtime!". It's a good class, though. I'm excited to finally actally learn what a Turing machine is and what NP completeness means. I miss being more involved in tilde stuff and solarpunk and all of these little associated communities that I got into around the same time. I'm just... busy. I'll figure it out, though. I always do.