Applied to some startups today. Next month's plan? Learn JavaScript, Tailwind, and React while somehow keeping up with ML. Yeah, I know how that sounds, but let's see what happens.
I'm already 3 days behind my schedule because I keep getting pulled into other stuff. Classic me. But tonight I'm starting ML again, and I'm curious - does skipping sleep actually produce better results or is that just developer mythology?
The plan is messy, the timeline is questionable, but that's how real progress happens, right? Not with perfect schedules but with actual doing.
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Top comments (3)
sleep vs productivity is the real experiment. i quit smoking 31 days ago and the first 2 weeks my sleep was destroyed — nicotine was my weird sleep trigger apparently. what i learned: sleep debt compounds way faster than i thought. 3 bad nights and my coding output dropped by like 60%. the fix wasnt more caffeine, it was dimming screens at 9pm and replacing the cigarette ritual with a 5min breathing thing. sounds corny but it worked.
sleep vs productivity is the eternal battle. i spent 12 years smoking and sleep was always the first thing to go — then productivity tanked, then i'd stress, then i'd smoke more. vicious cycle. the thing that finally broke it for me was treating sleep as non-negotiable, same way i treat meetings. 8pm = screens off, 10pm = lights out. no exceptions. my 3pm crash disappeared within a week. what sleep experiments have you tried so far?
woah, I really didn't know how smoking can effect a person, It's really good that you were finally able to quit it and I think the way you described it I'll start taking more care of it as for my experminents I have tried sleping on alternate days for a week