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Remote learning support

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Jami Mays
Jami Mays

Remote Learning Made Me Rethink Everything (Even My Sleep Schedule)

Let me just say, when they first announced remote learning, I was... cautiously optimistic. Like, “Sweet, I can roll out of bed and join class in my pajamas? Count me in.” And yeah, it was kinda fun at first. I'd sleep in, make coffee during lectures, sometimes mute my mic and take notes while half-watching Netflix in the background. But that wore off fast. Like, week three fast.


What no one tells you about remote learning is how weirdly exhausting it is. You are technically at home your “safe space” but it is also suddenly your classroom, your library, your cafeteria, your everything. There’s no mental separation, no “leaving” class. It’s just... more screen time. Always more screen time.


The Chaos of Trying to Focus at Home

So here’s how it usually went down for me: wake up late, panic join Zoom with camera off, try to listen while my little brother plays Fortnite next to me, and then somehow still end the day feeling like I ran a mental marathon. Focusing? A joke. Studying? Even worse. I’d tell myself “I’ll do it after dinner,” and then boom, it’s midnight and I’ve achieved nothing except unlocking a new level of academic guilt.


It wasn’t even about being lazy. It was burnout. I started losing track of deadlines, missing small assignments, and straight up ignoring group project emails because I couldn’t deal. You ever get that thing where you read the same sentence five times and still have no idea what it says? That became my daily vibe.


Finding Some Structure (Kind Of)

Eventually, I had to figure out some way to not completely fall apart. I made a basic schedule (which I broke half the time, but still). I downloaded Notion to organize my classes, set alarms for everything, and even started forcing myself to study at the dining table instead of my bed. Little things. But they helped.


Also, I learned to ask for help. I used to be super stubborn about that—like, “No, I can do it all myself.” Yeah... no. Whether it was texting a classmate to clarify the assignment, or sending an awkward email to my prof saying “hey I’m struggling,” I realized asking doesn’t make you weak. It makes you human.


When You Just Need a Break (No Shame in That)

One week, I had two essays due and I was just done. Like, mentally shut down. I kept staring at the blank Google Doc and thinking, “This isn’t gonna happen.” So I looked up essay writing service Canada just out of desperation. I didn’t actually use one that time, but knowing those services exist for when things really spiral? That alone eased some pressure.


It’s not about cheating or being lazy—it’s about recognizing that sometimes you need backup. Whether it’s help with essay writing, or just an extension on a deadline, we all need something at some point. And let’s be real, nobody’s thriving 24/7 in this remote-learning chaos.


Remote Learning Isn’t Just School—It’s Everything

What really messed with me was how remote learning made everything feel kinda... blurred? Like, am I in class or just in my room? Is this a break or am I procrastinating? I missed the walk between lectures, that buzz in the campus café, even awkwardly making eye contact with people from class in the library. Zoom can’t replace that.


But at the same time, I weirdly grew from it? I learned how to be more self-motivated (sometimes), how to make space for mental health (with lots of trial and error), and how to not feel guilty for needing rest. I stopped comparing myself to people who posted “study aesthetic” pics on Instagram like they had it all together. Spoiler: they don’t.


What I’d Tell Someone Struggling Right Now

If you’re in the thick of remote learning hell and feel like you’re falling behind first off, you’re not alone. Seriously. So many people are quietly struggling and pretending they're fine. Talk to someone. Set small goals. Reward yourself when you hit them. Find that one classmate who actually responds to emails and form a little survival squad.


And don’t feel bad if you need help. Whether that’s mental health support, extra time on assignments, or even an essay helper during crunch week it is okay. You are doing your best, and sometimes your best needs backup.

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