Juggling college and a healthy lifestyle- HELP!

briannaoneill
briannaoneill Posts: 4 Member
I am a Chemistry Major at school and I switched late to the major and now in the fall I am going to be taking all the hardest chemistry classes to stay on track for graduation. Plus I have to commute this year. To prep for it I want to start a type of schedule in the summer, I am working full time in a chemistry major with a 45 minute commute each day. Any other busy bees know how to handle it all?

Any support, advice, or suggestion will be really greatly appreciated!

Replies

  • lovecrystaljoy
    lovecrystaljoy Posts: 297 Member
    One advice I can give you is to prepare you lunch and breakfast the day before.
    * This will help decrease the urge to get FAST FOOD *
  • tajmel
    tajmel Posts: 401 Member
    I'm in a similar situation (chemical engineering, focusing on graduating and losing weight), but I also have kids. I don't envy your commute! I used to commute an hour each way. So ridiculously mind-numbing!

    A few things I find helpful: 1) Make sure that at least some of the people you spend a lot of time with are studious, healthy, and active. If they're in the same year/program as you, so much the better. 2) Be as efficient as possible. Plan your meals, plan your workouts, plan your whole day. Pre-prep as much of your food on the weekend as possible. Make lists. Keep a planner. If you can do two things at once, you should. I have a friend who reads his textbooks on the elliptical. 3) Make good use of down time. Ie, use your commute to relax a little (we all need it). Get some books on tape, or blast some music. 4) Use all your resources. Friends, instructors, study groups, supplementary material, even youtube videos on the topics you're studying. It all helps.

    Good luck!
  • briannaoneill
    briannaoneill Posts: 4 Member
    Thank you so much for your help. I can definitely do that.
    And good luck on chemical engineering, that's a tough one!
  • You can do this! I balanced grad school, kids, and teaching chemistry, all while commuting over an hour to school. It takes some organization, but it can be done. Tajmel's advice is great! To it, I would add:

    1) Use things like iTune U to get recordings of lectures on the topics in class. Sometimes it's good to hear the same topics covered by a different professor.
    2) Work on it everyday, even if it's only for 30 minutes. Work problems, look at your notes, and read the book. I know this sounds stupid, but it is much easier to spend 30 minutes a day than to cram all of the studying into a day or two near the test.
    3) The second that you don't understand something, go see the professor/TA. Don't come in and just say "I don't understand" ... ask specific questions, show them the problems you tried to work, bring your notes and point out where you got lost. Even though you think you are bothering them, you're not. We wouldn't teach if we didn't want to help students. Stop by and chat.
    4) Use google to find worksheets and problem sets that you can work on. Search on specific topics and you will find a whole bunch of resources. Often the worksheets will have the problems worked out for you in the answers so you can see the logic.
    5) These websites have a lot of good studying ideas: http://cas.lsu.edu/
    http://www.uic.edu/depts/ace/strategies.shtml
    Try concept mapping. it is very helpful for complex, interconnected topics.
    6) Have fun and enjoy your chosen major. I loved being a chem major in undergrad. Although your class is going to be hard (PChem?), it will be interesting. Band with your fellow classmates. Bond over the class. Join the Chem Club, if your school has one. Study together and have fun together. Meet some of the upperclassmen and see if they can give you some tips and study materials.

    As for the lifestyle:
    1) I leave a case of water in my car so I can always run back and get some.
    2) Relax and walk as much as possible. Even if you don't think you have time for exercise, fit in a walk on campus. It is a great way to combat stress and stay fit. Studying? Write out some index cards and take them with you. You can quiz yourself and walk at the same time.
    3) Use all the resources on campus. If the school has a pool, a gym, or a track, use them. If they offer a spin class or aerobics, take them. Our college has Yoga - free! This will help you manage stress and keep to your lifestyle.
    4) Pack snacks. Baggies of almonds, pretzels, or yummy fruit. A bag of microwave popcorn in the students' lounge can make you a lot of friends. :) Those vending machines are so tempting ... stay strong.
    5) Be mindful of when you eat and why you eat. Stress can do some crazy things. Try not to snack while you're studying. So tempting, but it is a bad habit (one that I am still trying to break).

    Good luck!
  • chonji4ever
    chonji4ever Posts: 120 Member
    Healthy Lifestyle:
    You are making the right steps here, just keep it up. Get more healthy all-ready prepared foods if you are crunched for time, as there are quite a few options for that now a days. However, there are a lot of healthy quick and easy recipies out there.

    Get the most of your study time for college juggling:
    Make for sure you are getting enough sleep at night! Get up way early, and do some reading before you have to start the rush (I think it wakes the mind up). Use noise cancelling head phones with clasical music (great study music because there are no lyrics to side track your mind) any time there is a hint of distraction around you. Take breaks every hour!

    Chemistry is a great and interesting subject! I loved it in college, but it does take time and you earn those 5 credit hour :)
  • briannaoneill
    briannaoneill Posts: 4 Member
    This is literally some of the best advice I've ever gotten! Thank you so much and I'm really jealous of you, I want to teach Chemistry so bad, I love chemistry.

    And I am completely guilty of being a study snacker. I'm trying to switch to ice water while I study for the GRE.

    For the school things, I am a type A student where I do all those things to begin with. My problem is, putting it constantly ahead of my health but there is a way to put them together. I know it can be done.

    I have a little cubby on campus, I will definitely keep water and snacks in there and pack lunch. I will definitely have to wake up earlier too. I may start practicing when I am going to wake up over the summer just so it's not a complete shock when school starts.

    Thank you everyone for the support and advice. This is such a great site, and you are all an example of that!
  • tajmel
    tajmel Posts: 401 Member
    Oh man, those are some great tips! I shall make good use of them too, thanks!
  • hbunting86
    hbunting86 Posts: 952 Member
    Hey - busy PhD student here so I'll throw in my two cent's worth!

    Use one day to make your lunches etc - I typically set Sunday afternoon aside to do 'my' things... I make up lunches and freeze them (either sandwiches - you can take them out in the morning and they'll defrost by lunch; or hot meals if you've got a microwave/student room you can heat food in).

    Use your commute to unwind as said - I commuted 1.5hrs per day when I was doing my MSc... not ideal but I used it as time to get some mental clarity and digest the work I'd been doing that day.

    Read your notes/textbooks in short sharp blocks. It's pointless spending hour after hour puzzling over something - study when you're mentally alert and you'll find it so much easier than feeling like you *have* to study 24/7. Sometimes less really is more.

    Use exercise as a break/treat! Believe me, I rely on the gym for my own sanity. I go first thing in the morning, as I know I'm going to be sitting using my brain and not my body for the next 8-10 hours. That hour in the morning is 'my' time - and when I've physically exerted myself I feel that mentally I can cope with anything the day chooses to throw at me.

    Hope this helps :)

    Heather
  • slkehl
    slkehl Posts: 3,801 Member
    I'm a science major with a crazy unit load too! I pack my own lunch as well as some high protein snacks. Keeps me from buying unhealthy food on campus! I also buy cute gym clothes I feel comfortable wearing to class. That way I'll just come to school in them a few times a week to work out after class. I'm super lazy, so I'm much more motivated to go to the gym if I'm already dressed for it! But I really think the best way to keep your weight healthy when you're really busy is with healthy eating choices. That way you can still lose, even if you don't have time to work out.
  • zoukeira
    zoukeira Posts: 313 Member
    I'm terrible at packing my own lunches for uni, I try to make myself a few sandwiches when I make my son's school lunch and I like to throw in a healthy snack (like an apple or two) that normally tides me over for the day. But failing that I've scoped out all the cafes and restaurants on campus and I know where to buy yummy healthy salads (vege or fruit) or bircher museli.

    Oh one thing I have been doing is parking miles away from campus so I HAVE to walk 15-30mins there and 15-30mins back. It's not so great if the weather's bad but it really does make a difference. I keep telling myself 'll join the rec centre too, but it hasn't happened yet - 5 years of being married to a Personal Trainer (no longer married) and I'm a little over being a gym bunny *sigh* I'll stick to my dancing.
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