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Mental Health: A Dark Past and an Uncertain Future

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History has shown us time and again what happens when people don’t know why something bad is happening. They panic. They look for the wrong solutions. They do things that, in hindsight, seem horrifying. We’ve seen this before— plagues, witch hunts, mass hysteria. And now, I think we’re in a similar era with mental health —not knowing the real reasons behind our struggles, and in our desperation, making things worse for ourselves. A History of Fear and Wrong Answers There were two catastrophic illnesses that ravaged societies, mostly in Europe. The Bubonic Plague and the Salem Witch Trials hysteria. The Plague: The Wrong Enemy Imagine if people dealing with the Black Death knew that it was fleas that carried the disease, not the rats. Imagine if they realized that the reason doctors wearing wax-coated clothing didn’t get sick wasn’t because of the spices in their beak masks, but because their clothes blocked the infected fleas. But they didn’t know that. Instead, they slaug...

Why 10fastfingers Consistently Beats Monkeytype for This Typing Enthusiast

MonkeyType vs. 10FastFingers: A Typist’s Perspective As an avid typer, I’ve spent a lot of time on both MonkeyType and 10FastFingers . But one thing always puzzled me—why is my score consistently better on 10FastFingers than on MonkeyType? Today, I decided to analyze the differences, and I’ve realized something interesting: 10FastFingers is actually designed in a way that makes typing feel smoother, more intuitive, and less mentally exhausting. Here’s why. MonkeyType vs. 10FastFingers: A Lesson in Focus 1. How They Handle Mistakes 👉 MonkeyType: It keeps all your mistakes visible as you type. This means you constantly see a reminder of your errors, which can be mentally draining. It’s like having a little voice in your head saying, "Look how many mistakes you made!" 👉 10FastFingers: It only shows the next two lines of text. If you make a mistake, it disappears quickly. There’s no dwelling on errors—you’re forced to focus on what’s next. This subtle difference creates a hu...

How to solve a difficult problem or How to understand a difficult concept

 Repetition is the key Understanding a difficult concept or any concept: Say you need 25 minutes to understand a particular concept for which you have to read say 5 pages, then a much better way to utilize those 25 minutes would be to split those 25 minutes into 3 stages, first 2 stages of 10 minutes and last stage of 5 mins.  Stage 1:  10 minutes: Set a timer for 10 mins and read very fastly those 5 pages, our aim is to get a surface level understanding of what is being said. Stage 2:  10 minutes: Reread those 5 pages but now focus on what you did not understand and read those paragraphs well, this time you will get most of what has been written Stage 3:  5 minutes: now focus on the very difficult portion that you could not get and read it once try to understand it in a diferent way  Bonus Stage 4: Search difficult topic on google, YT, any other website, ask your teacher, friends. The point is to get help on that topic. Now lets see, what will happen if yo...