Man, your videos are packed with value and craft. I love it. Also - I've never felt more seen having US clients while travelling in Asia. Those 5am wakeups are 🫠
If you have the means, I suggest incorporating something with a subwoofer, and using pink over white noise. The added low end will do a ton of heavy lifting to drowm out external noises, and will do more to envelop your body in the sound vs a small speaker.
I grew up in a crowded city so I always had some background noise (cars, people, construction) while sleeping. After moving to a small city, I find it really difficult to sleep as I can hear everything. I plan on buying a white noise machine but I don't know which one. Perhaps I'll get the one mentioned in this video.
@@Samuel-hj9tyI don't have an iPhone unfortunately, I use an android phone. Plus I wouldn't want to have my phone low on battery in the mornings after keeping it playing throughout the night. That's why I'd prefer to have a separate speaker device for noise.
I'm going to try to spend a whole year without focusing on other social medias like WhatsApp and all of that my dad's phone has spam calls all the time but you know what I'm just going to ignore all of that stuff and I'm going to shorten my screen time and so I wouldn't just be addicted to RU-vid instead all day
Im not sure cheesing and maximizing individual items to the detriment of useless stats like intelligence is a good idea to play real life. Also you don't need to over level to face high tier content if you know how to cheese the game. Life does not play like a videogame at all.
"i actually wanted to do something with my life".... sorry to tell ya bro but having to give up a hobby you enjoy isn't the play. perhaps you should have played some time management games.
Generally, I'd agree, but when it's genuinely a problem like it was for me, going cold turkey is a good idea. If I came back to them now I could probably have a healthy relationship with them.
The fact that life should be treated as a videogame is such helpful advice! I was addicted to rocket league for years (almost 5k hours played) and I found out that it's partly because of the short (5-minute) competitive matches, which I would subconciously queue again and again after each game. Seeing this, I reverse engineered the process to work in my favor: I started using a physical 5 minute timer for my productivity, focusing intensly for 5 minutes just how I did in the game towards building a business. I repeated the process over and over again with no expectations or goals for how productive I should be. Naturally, I started playing less. I've progressed a lot since doing so and found some success by somewhat tricking my brain with what its been accustomed to.
Once you find more important things to focus your energy on, you'll naturally invest more time in them. That's ultimately what got me to stop playing video games every day.