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- It doesn't feel like work if you enjoy it.
It doesn't feel like work if you enjoy it.


Everyone knows that life, school, and work is hard with very few ways around it. One of the ways to make it better is to choose a degree or job you truly enjoy because you will be much happier and healthier long term. When you choose your major for its rigor, prestige, or financial projection, you are trading away long term certainty for short term relief.
By choosing what you’re passionate for, you will always be curious, innovative, and mentally sound—even while everyone else around you is losing it. You may make less money in the short term by choosing psychology over engineering but if you truly enjoy psychology (or engineering) you’ll be much richer not just monetarily but through your happiness, relationships, and health improving.
So choose where your heart, brain, and gut are pointing towards and shoot for the moon.
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Coming Soon: How to Understand Physics as a Science!
Because physics is the most fundamental science, its laws can be described using highly accurate and highly specific mathematical equations that map cleanly onto reality. However, most people struggle in introductory physics courses because it’s laws—such as Newton’s second law and conservation of momentum—are introduced as equations to solve problems before being properly understood and read as statements about nature.
And because most physics curriculums emphasize problem-solving before intuition, that leaves most students—even the best ones—unsure about what they’re calculating.
That’s why I’m building a guide which focuses on teaching physics intuitively as a science so that students can understand how to read equations as statements of nature and graph them so that they understand what to do when they run into a new practice problem.
Once you understand the science, you’ll never have to memorize a problem set again!
Version 1 Coming Soon!
Since you’re Here, check out my other offers to succeed in STEM!

The hardest part about math isn’t the raw calculations: it’s understanding what the math means when rearranging and graphing functions. Most students aren’t trained to interpret the math from a qualitative perspective which is why many students who are ‘good at math’ struggle in introductory chemistry, physics, and engineering courses.
That’s why I’ve created the Ultimate Algebra Guide for Science & Engineering Majors which covers all of the relevant concepts from algebra, trigonometry, and precalculus courses that are applicable for science & engineering majors condensed into a 700+ page guide!
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