productivity

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How I Increased My Typing Speed to Over 100 Words Per Minute

Typing is one of the most valuable professional skills you can develop. Whether you're writing emails, creating content, coding, studying, or managing projects, faster typing allows you to capture ideas more efficiently and spend less time fighting the keyboard. Over the years, I gradually increased my typing speed to well over 100 words per minute while maintaining strong accuracy. It didn't happen through a special keyboard, expensive software, or natural talent. It came from a handful of habits that improved both speed and consistency. If you'd like to type faster without constantly correcting mistakes, here are the strategies that helped me most.

Why “New Year, New You” Fails (And What Actually Works Instead)

Every January millions of people decide this will finally be the year everything changes. They buy gym memberships. Start diets. Purchase planners. Create ambitious goals. And within weeks, many are right back where they started. The problem isn't a lack of desire. It's believing lasting change comes from one big decision instead of hundreds of small ones. Becoming a better version of yourself doesn't happen because the calendar changes. It happens because your daily habits do.

How to Make Time for Your Goals When Life Feels Busy

Most people don't fail to achieve their goals because they lack ambition. They fail because life gets busy. Work expands. Family responsibilities grow. Unexpected obligations appear. Before long, the goals that once felt important get pushed further and further into the background. The challenge is that meaningful goals rarely arrive with extra time attached to them. If we want to make progress, we often have to intentionally create space for what matters rather than waiting for a perfect schedule that never arrives.

Stop Perfecting Every Sentence – Just Share Your Story

It's been said every sentence is a persuasive argument that succeeds or fails in convincing the reader to read the next. Agree or disagree?

Frankly, I don't agree (completely) because the reader is complex, having a multi-dimensional purpose for reading. One aspect may be truly that each good sentence does cause the reader to continue on. But at the same time, the reader, once personally invested through time, money, promise, or any other act of will may continue reading not for that purposes alone. I listen to audio books during my commute. I have literally finished books only to be able to say I finished them, not because they provided some revolutionary insight or emotional experience. I simply wanted to finish what I started.