Sunday, February 15, 2026

The Survival Guide of a Chronically Stressed Hedgehog

Phase 1, Me Pretending I Know What I’m Doing

During Phase 1, it was honestly just me trying to survive because I didn’t really know how this class works. I kept thinking I was already behind even when I wasn’t. So I tried to stay ahead because once I fall behind, that’s it, game over. I don’t really have free time, but if I see even a small window, I sacrifice sleep just to keep up. I already know I mess up a lot, so I try to prevent future problems before they happen, even if that means stressing myself out early.

Time Management, or Lack Thereof


If I could redo Phase 1, I would manage my time better. Maybe actually use lunchtime to read ahead instead of thinking I have “plenty of time.” Because I thought the computer assignments would be quick. They were not quick. You open it and suddenly there are like 10 steps and if you miss one tiny thing, it’s wrong. The syllabus was already available before class started, so technically I should have prepared more. I also couldn’t access the MOS program at first, which did not help my stress level. I should have watched more videos early on because the videos actually helped me understand what the exam would look like instead of
going in blind.

Chapter 4, The Citation Police

For my topic I want to talk about 4.10.1 Citations and References, especially APA 7th edition formatting. Professors really love citations. I’m not even joking. You can write amazing content, lose sleep, pour your soul into it, and then lose points because the spacing is wrong or something isn’t italicized. And you’re just sitting there thinking, seriously? I still think content should matter more, but I get that formatting is part of being professional. I just need to accept that references are not optional and that tiny details matter whether I like it or not.

MO-110, Controlled Panic

For the MO-110 Word exam, I already took it. What I did was basically spam C.2.1 to C.2.6 assignments over and over again. If I got something wrong, I redid the video in the course and reviewed it again. I also redid Practice Exams A and B at least 2-4 times each because I didn’t trust myself. I probably reviewed four to six hours before taking the exam because in my head I was already preparing for failure. Somehow I didn’t fail, which honestly surprised me. But Excel? Excel is going to destroy me. I already know it. Excel and I have history and it’s not good.

My Survival Manual

If I want to share something, it’s this. People always say, oh this class is easy, accounting is easy, IS101 is easy. For me? No. It’s not easy. I STRUGGLE. My schedule is literally my survival guide. If I don’t follow it, everything collapses. I use checklists because I need to physically see that I did something. Crossing out tasks makes me weirdly happy because at least I accomplished something that day. I don’t feel prepared most of the time. I just do the work and hope for the best. If I pass, that’s a win. If I don’t, at least I know I tried.



3 comments:

  1. Not only did you not fail, you scored a near-perfect on the MO-110 Word certification exam. Great job!

    Crossing tasks off a checklist makes you weirdly happy? You might not be the only person :-)

    Yes, formatting is important and part of being professional but I value content more.

    I know your will conquer MO-210 Excel certification exam like you did with MO-110, Kevin ^_^

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  2. Hello Kevin. From what I've seen you're always ahead so you have nothing to worry about, as much as I know saying that won't help much. I tend to probably be the worst person I know in terms of time management. I try to keep a planner going like how it works for some people but I never seem to be able to follow it because I forget the planner even existed. I'm actually little jealous of people who can use them properly and can follow the times they set for themselves. You seem very well prepared and I know you'll do well.

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    Replies
    1. Hello Izzy, don’t let the planner fool you, I actually move tasks around a lot more than it looks. What works for me is keeping tasks as small as possible because if they feel too big, it’s easy to get discouraged. For example, instead of saying “finish Chapter 4,” I’ll set something like “work on 4.1.1 for 20 minutes,” which feels more manageable. Over time, I think my brain just got used to working in smaller chunks like that. So I’m really not as organized as I seem, just trying to stay consistent in my own way.

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