Mario Villalobos

Year One

Better Than My Best

I accomplished a great deal today, both at work at and at home. I feel good and productive and relieved. At work, I finally did something I’ve been thinking about doing since the beginning of my time there: I cleaned up the Group Policy manager. For those who don’t know what that is, let me explain. In Windows Server, there’s something called a Group Policy manager, and what this does is manage all the policies that are applied to all of our computers in our domain. This can be as generic as defining how users log on to computers to the specifics of which icon appears on certain computer desktops. The more polices the computer has to process, the slower the startup time becomes. I was able to combine about 10 policies for just printers into one simple policy, and about the same for icons. I think I did this better than what was there, and I’m really happy about it.

The other thing I did today was break down my daily routine in my calendar. It was enlightening and gratifying. I’ve almost blocked out every minute of every day except for about 30 minutes in the evening. It’s kind of insane. I watch about 3 hour-long episodes of television a day, and that’s where I think I can start cutting back on a daily basis. I think from 3 to 2 a day will be a nice start. I think if I have more direction when it comes to my free time I’ll be more productive overall. I really never took advantage of those 30 minutes in the evening because I didn’t know what to do. Maybe now I can optimize my days a little bit. Kinda anal, but I’m okay with it.

I’m almost 40% through this self-imposed journey, and I don’t know how much I’ve actually done. Looking back, I guess I’ve done a lot, especially since before I basically did nothing, so the contrast there is pretty stark. I mean, I’m in the best shape of my life, I found and kept the best job of my life, I drove to freaking California and back with all my stuff and a bunch of furniture from IKEA. That last one is still kind of unbelievable to me. I’m also trying every day to be better, and that’s something I’m proud of, even if I don’t live up to my expectations. Maybe I’m hard on myself because I know I can be better. I know I can push myself harder, and I know I can succeed. It’s just a matter of actually doing it. Yes it’s hard, but that’s the point, right?

I’ll be done with Week 3 of Insanity Max: 30 tomorrow, and simply hearing Shaun T every day telling me to keep pushing is something I’ve grown to need. If I can’t do one more rep, I do three. I don’t give up, I don’t stop, I keep moving, and I keep doing better than my best. That’s the only way to live.

Lets do this.

Breaking It Down

So I made no progress on my plans from yesterday to be better today. My routine is stuck, and I need to muster up more strength to unstick it. I’m not sure how to do that other than having the willpower to do it. Right now, I don’t have the willpower because I’m already doing a lot. I still have my routines in the morning and at night, I still workout every day, and I work 40 hours a week. Like I wrote yesterday, I really only have three hours to play around with, and right now, I’m spending most of them watching TV, and I enjoy it. Three hours is a lot, especially if I decide to implement one, maybe two, more things to do in that time frame. I can do more work with my novel or learn a new skill or finish many tasks on my todo list. The problem, like I said, is finding the willpower, but my willpower is finite and I’m afraid I’m already spending it all.

I’m thinking a lot about my schedule. My daily schedule. I’ve been thinking about breaking down my day, down to the minute, on my calendar. I want to know where the “dead spots” are. What I can cut, where I can add, and when’s the best time for me to use these three hours to the best of my abilities. I haven’t done it yet, but I plan to. I really have no idea. I can sense what my day looks like since they don’t really change. But if I’m trying to go to sleep my 8:30 every night — in order to get 8.5 hours of sleep a night — then my time is super valuable and scarce. And I have to figure out how much TV, if any, I’ll allow myself to watch a day. Any show will eat into my three hours, so that’s something to consider.

Why am I trying to do this? To optimize my days down to the minute? I don’t think I’m going to live by my schedule, but I am curious to see what a typical day looks like on a calendar. To feel the rhythms and see where it might be the best place for me to start implementing these new time blocks of productivity. Maybe it’s anal. I don’t care. I’m curious, and now I’m committed. But, if I’m being honest, I don’t feel like I’m doing enough, like I’m failing myself. I made a promise to myself on Day 1, and I don’t know if I’m living up to my expectations. Part of me doesn’t like writing these entries online anymore and misses the intimacy of a paper journal. The other part of me knows my entries won’t be half as good as the ones here. I simply want to keep improving, to keep doing my best to be my best. It’s hard, and sometimes I feel like quitting, but I have a drive to just keep going. To keep moving my feet.

And that’s something that’ll never not be a part of me.

Three Hours

On Monday, I finished reading Manage Your Day-to-Day: Build Your Routine, Find Your Focus & Sharpen Your Creative Mind by 99U, and yesterday I started to read Maximize Your Potential: Grow Your Expertise, Take Bold Risks & Build an Incredible Career by 99U. Both books are in the productivity genre of literature that I actually enjoy reading, and every time I read books like these, I get pumped up. I want to do more. I want to be more efficient, more productive, and more creative.

There was something I read in there today about shaking up the status quo and pushing yourself past your comfort zone because that’s the only way you’ll ever improve. I needed to read that because that’s how I’ve felt for a few months now. I try to push myself, but I’m so complacent in my routine that I just don’t want to. A big part of my routine, unfortunately, is watching TV. If I watched zero minutes of television a day, I would reclaim hours of my day to push myself in ways I know I’ll be proud of. But it’s hard. I love TV. I love coming home from work, grabbing a few snacks, lying in bed with my laptop, and hitting play on some television show. It’s relaxing and fun. But every time I do, I later lament those lost hours. I could’ve spent more time on my novel if only I didn’t spend that hour watching the Good Wife.

There was a chapter in there devoted to deliberate practice. This was made famous by Malcolm Gladwell, who wrote about the 10,000 hour rule to master anything. I’ve always been of two minds with this. On the one hand, I loved it because it gave me a tangible goal to strive for. 10,000 hours is a nice number that we can all somewhat see. It’s a big number, but it seems doable. On the other hand, I feel like it discredits anyone who doesn’t or hasn’t spent that amount of time with their craft. Like, take an up and coming rock band. They’re good, but the musicians are all in their early twenties. Do we think they spent 10,000 hours deliberately practicing their music? I doubt it, but it doesn’t discount the fact that I like their music, and that I think they’re good. I guess it’s about mastery and not just being “good.” Whatever.

I don’t know where I’m going with this. These sessions have become a chore and not really the necessary time to really evaluate my life and my actions in an honest and open way. Chore might be the wrong word. It is the wrong word. It’s a task I want to check off my todo list. That’s what this has become, and I feel guilty about that. I feel the same way about my novel. I loved the first three chapters of my book, but I’ve slowly grown to resent the last six. It’s difficult to give everything I do 100%, and it’s especially disconcerting when I want to give everything I do 100% and I don’t. Hence the reason why I’m reading these books. I want to get better, but a big part of that process is finding the time.

I will always have 24 hours a day to live my life. I’ve been neglecting my sleep for months. I get, at best 7 hours of sleep a night. I want to get 8.5. I spent 8 hours at work, but I spent about 30 minutes driving to and from work, with an extra half hour thrown in for randomness. That’s a good 9 hours devoted to just work. Already I’m at 17.5 hours of my days accounted for, leaving me with 6.5. I spent an hour working out and showering, maybe 30-60 minutes cooking and eating breakfast, lunch, and dinner, about an hour spent writing my journal and novel. That leaves me with about 3.5 hours left. A good 30 minutes of that is spent doing some other stuff, like meditating, and other routines. If I didn’t watch TV, I could use that time to improve, but instead, I watch TV. That’s where that extra time goes to. 3 hours a day, at least, spent passively watching people act on a laptop screen. Is that wise? I don’t know. I can’t squeeze every hour of my days with doing something productive. I’ll just burn out.

Three hours to improve my life. Wow.

Back to My Stultifying Routine

Compared to last week, today’s day at work felt slow even though I did a lot. Semester grades were due last week, but since the network was down, the deadline was pushed to this week. I spent most of today fixing any and all issues that arose in Infinite Campus, and I think by the end of the day, I was able to get to most, if not all, of these issues. One of the things that sucks about the network crashing last week, including the fixes I made, is the fact that all of our netbooks and laptops need to be plugged in with an ethernet cord for them to get the updates from the server in order for them to be able to use the Wi-Fi. Fortunately, that’s not something I had to do. Instead, that was something I had to advise the teachers about, and since they have a couple dozen students per class, they can use them to implement these changes.

I feel more confident now. Nothing like a crisis to make me feel like I conquer anything now. I was in full on crisis mode last week, and I spent every minute of all my shifts last week focused on fixing the problems we were having. Today felt less exciting. I was glad I was able to use my MacBook again to get my work done, but with no mysteries to solve, I felt.. I’m not sure what the right word is. I wasn’t bored. I wasn’t unmotivated. Everything was stultifying. That’s an SAT word I taught myself years ago. I had no enthusiasm at work because there were no mysteries to solve. I love helping teachers with their jobs, but it was all part of my old routine. I liked my old routine pre-crisis, but post-crisis? There’s no excitement!

I know how insane this attitude sounds. I’m still getting paid the same. The stress is way lower than it was last week. Teachers, staff, and even students have come up to me to thank me for fixing the internet, and that feels good. It makes me feel confident. But no one’s going to come up to me to thank me for making sure their grades were sent home or whatever. Nor should they. Is it the recognition that I miss? Maybe a little bit. Mostly, I miss solving big mysteries. Even though I had a bad week last week, I had fun. I was struggling to figure out the problems, and I loved investigating all the symptoms, researching, testing, re-hypothesizing, re-testing, doing more research, throwing a tennis ball against the wall until another idea popped in my head, re-testing again, re-researching, throwing the ball even more times against the wall, and finally figuring it out and seeing my tests bear fruit. That was fun. Seeing everything start working again after a week of false starts and failures just make me feel good.

It’s insane to pray for another crisis just to feel that way, but my current routine really isn’t going to manifest them. I have been thinking about the future, about all the changes and upgrades I could make, and those thoughts are exciting. Maybe that’s where I’ll focus my energies. Who knows, right?

I Got This

I fixed it. I fixed the network problems we were having at school for the past week. And if I just stayed an extra hour yesterday, I could’ve fixed it then. It turned out to be a Windows Update that corrupted our trusted root certificates, which prevented anyone from connecting to our wireless server. Let me warn you right now, I’m going to get technical because I want to write this down both for posterity’s sake and to see if I can understand all the things that just went wrong. Let me start from the beginning.

Last Monday, I came to work with teachers telling me they couldn’t log on to the wireless network. I sat down one of the teacher computers, and I sure enough, I couldn’t connect to the wireless except on one of these computers. But I could connect to the internet if I was plugging into the ethernet, and both my iPhone and MacBook Air could connect to the wireless network. I ran tests. I ran a lot of tests, and I couldn’t figure out why this was happening. I thought maybe something I did the week before — something like the roaming profiles and folder redirection I was so excited to finally implement — did something to it, so I decided to recover a backup of our two main domain controllers to a point before I made these changes. Turns out, that had nothing to do with it, and I just made things worse.

Once I recovered the first of the two domain controllers from our backups, I inadvertently disjoined our NAS (Network Attached Storage) drive from the domain. Our network could no longer see it, and I was getting reports from teachers that their students couldn’t access their documents on our network. That was an issue I didn’t discover until days later, and it was one of many issues that came up during this dark period. Our two domain controllers are virtual computers, meaning they don’t exist physically. It’s a version of Windows running inside another version of Windows. Once I recovered the second domain controller, I went to “boot it up,” except the Hyper-V manager that runs this OS gave me errors that it couldn’t start it up. This normally happens, and the way to do it is to send it a command through the command prompt. But! I needed the network for this command to work, and I didn’t have the network since our two domain controllers couldn’t talk to each other. We have two just in case one goes down, and they’re setup to replicate to each other every 15 minutes or so. So I decided to reboot the whole host computer in hopes that fixed anything. It didn’t.

By rebooting this computer, I somehow crashed the whole network. Nobody could logon to the internet anymore, and I was panicking. Both the wireless went down and our physical connections were down. Our domain controllers couldn’t talk to each other even though they both existed and could contact every other server on the network. What the hell happened? I think by rebooting the computer, which is something these machines aren’t really mean to do that often, one of the NIC’s (Network Interface Cards) blew out or was damaged somehow. These are the cards with the Ethernet port, and it was a reason why we weren’t getting any internet activity on my primary domain controller. Once I switched ports, internet went back up, and with our primary domain controller up, our secondary domain controller could finally see it and it could finally replicate itself with the primary domain controller. The physical connection to the internet was back, but the wireless was still down. What happened?

At the beginning of the week, I looked at the error logs on the server that was responsible for our wireless network. But from the 16th to the 21st, there weren’t any messages in the log. I checked the logs on the 19th and 20th, and since I didn’t see any messages, I disregarded this server as the source to our problems. The reason I wasn’t getting any error messages was because the event log was full, and once I logged on to see that message, errors finally started to get logged. I investigated these errors on Friday, but I couldn’t figure them out by the time I had to leave. I came back on Sunday, did some research, and discovered the problems Windows Update caused. There was an update designed just for Windows clients that updated their trusted root certificates with newer versions. All good, right? Well, this update wasn’t configured for Windows Server 2003, which is what my server in charge of the wireless ran. Windows Server 2003 has a small size limit as to how many certificates it stores, and since this update installed more than it could handle, Windows Server 2003 deleted many certificates to make room for the new ones, including our valid certificate in charge of authenticating users who wanted to access our wireless network.

The way enterprise authentication works is this: one server runs both our RADIUS server and an Internet Authentication System server. The Internet Authentication System (IAS) and RADIUS work together. RADIUS connects to our primary domain controller, which runs our Active Directory, which has all our user accounts, with their user names and passwords. IAS stores the encryption and certificates that RADIUS uses to authenticate users who want to logon. Windows Update corrupted these certificates. Since the certificates on our authentication server didn’t match anything, it denied access to everyone. I had to create an entirely new certificate, add it to our RADIUS server, made sure IAS and our primary domain controller accepted it, and then finally wireless would work for everyone. And it did.

There’s a lot more I didn’t talk about, and that’s because I spent most of last week explaining more of the details. But that’s what happened in a nutshell.1 I’m glad this is over, and I’m glad I can finally get on with my life and start doing my job. This week really set me back, and now I try to play catchup. Gotta admit, this was pretty fun. I love mysteries, and this one both frustrated me and satisfied me. Now it seems like there’s nothing I can’t handle, and that’s awesome. I no longer feel insecure at work. I got this.


  1. A very big nutshell. ↩︎

Hell Week Is Over

The weekend is over, and I have to go back to work tomorrow. I actually went back to work today for a few hours to try to see if I could fix the issues plaguing our network. Turns out, I was able to fix one of the two problems. I fixed it pretty immediately because I spent some time yesterday just thinking through these issues, and I thought about tweaking something to see if it’ll work. It did. Everything is fixed except for our wireless issue. I tried a few more things, and it looks like I chipped away at the problem in a positive way, but we’re still having issues. I did some research, and I discovered that a Windows Update may have caused this problem in the first place. That was my initial suspicion but I couldn’t prove it. I tried some of the fixes I found on Microsoft’s own website, but they didn’t work. But I did get closer than I have, so I’m confident I can figure this out tomorrow. It could be a certificate issue, so I’m going to create a new one and see if that fixes anything.

I started doing my taxes yesterday. I had three different employers last year, and I’ve already received two of my W-2’s from them. Unfortunately, the one I have not received yet is from the employer I just don’t like, and that’s at my old job at McDonald’s. Turns out, I might have to go inside the damn restaurant and sign my name on a paper requesting to receive my W-2. They can’t just mail it out like a normal company. It’s so stupid. Anyways, from the two W-2’s I did get, it looks like I’ll be getting quite a healthy refund, and once I input my last W-2, that amount will most likely go up. What a relief. These car repairs really put a damper on my finances, and I can’t forget about the hundreds in gas I spent on my road trip to California, as well as my whole new home furnishings provided by IKEA. I’m eager to get this last W-2 so I can start paying down my debt. I’m also getting my new, bigger paycheck next week on the 1st of February, so I can start seeing how much more per check I’ll be earning, which in turn will help me see how much more I can contribute toward bringing my debt down.

Other than that, I really have nothing more to write about. It was a slow Sunday, which I loved. I watched a few more episodes of the Good Wife, I read some, went grocery shopping, and worked some on my computer. I sent out some emails to teachers who emailed me throughout the week but didn’t get back to because of the crisis I was embroiled in. I’m confident I can fix this issue tomorrow, and I wanted to get back on track. I can’t wait to get this issue behind me so I can just move on and do my job better.

This week has been hell. I hope next week will be better.

Feeling Pleasure by Denying Pleasure

I was texting with one of my friends yesterday about my horrible week at work, and our conversation turned to self-control. I told her about my desire to drink and eat junk food and my desire to indulge in all of my worst impulses. She said she had no self-control, and I told her how easy it was to have self-control. I told her to think about how good she’ll feel by not doing the things that make her feel good. I never thought about it myself in that way, but once I wrote it down, I laughed because of how true it was. She said I get off on asceticism. I think I do, actually. During this entire journey of my blog, a big part of my life has been denying myself past pleasures. I even keep track of how many days it’s been since the last time I drank or ate junk food or a handful of other bad habits. But I have what I think is a good reason for this.

I’m impulsive. It’s not the first time I’ve admitted this to myself, and it probably won’t be the last. When it comes to my impulses, I have a hard time controlling them. And the best way I’ve found that works for me to keep them under control is to deny them outright. I deal with extremes here, and I haven’t found a way to balance my life yet. I don’t drink anymore because I don’t like who I am when I drink. I do and say stupid things, and I’ve lost people because of that. I try not to eat junk food because my health is important, and I know if I have one burger, it’s going to be easier for me to let myself slip in some more junk food into my diet. I know I can control myself, but I’m like a pendulum: I swing one way, then the other, and my momentum will always keep me swinging. What I need to do is stop swinging. I need to have balance, but that’s way easier said than done.

My friend is right, too, though. I do take great pleasure in denying myself pleasures. I do get off on asceticism. The more bad habits I can deny myself, no matter how good they feel, the better I think my life will become. It’s like a purification and a simplification of my life. For the past 139 days, I’ve learned to live without many of my past bad habits, and I’ve turned out okay. Better than okay, actually. I feel like I’m at my best right now, and if I ever fall, I know it’s going to take me a long time to reach the heights I’m currently in. I have to keep reminding myself of all the good I’ve done because my mind makes it so easy for me to remember the bad. It reminds me of it all the time. But the more I keep forcing myself to remember the good I’ve done, the great things I’ve accomplished, the less ammo my mind has to hurt me. And I think that’s a big reason for my success.

I’m not sure what the lesson is here, if there even is one. I just thought this was a nice revelation in a week I learned a lot about myself. Maybe it can help someone, because in the end, that’s a big reason why I wanted to start this blog.

Shit Works! Sorta

I was able to fix a lot of the issues from the past few days today. Everyone has internet if they’re hard wired into our network. The wireless is still not working, which means I’m back to where I was Monday morning. That’s better than nothing, I guess. What fixed this problem was a bad ethernet port. At least, that’s what I think since all I did was move one ethernet cable to another port on our main host machine. Everything just started working on this machine, and I was able to get one of our two DNS servers working. Our secondary domain controller can finally talk to our primary one, but not the other way around. This was an issue I noticed on Tuesday, but the reverse: Our secondary domain controller couldn’t talk to our primary one, and it was this primary controller that was having connectivity issues. Now it’s our secondary one having issues. I haven’t been able to figure that out yet.

The network engineers who setup these servers back in 2013 are coming up on Monday to take a look at this mess. I tried talking to one of them over the phone and see if she could walk me through it, but she couldn’t. In fact, it didn’t even seem like she wanted to try. It was probably that and the fact that my problems were messy. Either way, relief should be coming Monday afternoon. I’m hesitant to let them come up because of how expensive they are, and because I know I can figure this out on my own. I’m planning to drop in for a few hours this weekend to try out a few more things, but I’m not very hopeful. Who knows, right? I wasn’t very hopeful when I switched ethernet ports, but it worked. Very strange indeed.

Besides all that, this week is finally over. I do have to say, it went by super fast, and because it went by so quickly, it seems like nothing happened this week in my life. I started a new book, I returned to Insanity and that totally helped with my stress and sanity, and I kept my self-control. There were a few days earlier this week where I totally could’ve convinced myself to buy some wine and buy some junk food and just indulge in all my worst impulses. I really wanted to do that, but I didn’t. I kept my cool. I kept chipping away at the problems at school, and I got some stuff working again today. I have some ideas that may get the wireless up and running again, but I don’t know until I try them. Things seem better now, and that’s awesome. I’ve learned a lot. Hell, I got a pretty quick education on how networking works. Everything from DNS to DHCP to RADIUS servers to so many other things. I know how everything is connected to everything else, and I know what tools to use to trouble shoot specific problems, and I feel more confident that I can do my job better than ever before. Of course shit still don’t work, but it will soon.

I hope.

I Didn't Want a Drink Today

Today was much better than yesterday, and that’s because I came out of hiding and made myself available to be seen by people. For the past three days, I’ve been locked inside my office trying to figure the issues we’ve been having with our network. All I did was stress myself out trying to figure out a problem that might be beyond the scope of my expertise. Today I accepted that. Today I allowed everyone who saw me to ridicule me, and I laughed along because I needed to. If I can’t make light of this situation, then I don’t deserve to be there. If the last tech guy can’t figure this out, then it’s okay that I can’t, either. That’s kind of horrible, but there’s truth there.

For some reason, and I’m not really going to go into much detail here, one of our servers — a very old server that the last tech guy wanted to decommission but couldn’t because of some DNS issues — worked as a DNS server. That means if I change the DNS server from any computer on our network to route traffic from this old DNS server, then that computer could get internet. I found this out yesterday, and today I changed some settings for a few of the more important people at school so they could have internet to do their jobs. That bought me some time.

I simply chipped away at the problem today. I took it slow. I read a lot. I performed a lot of tests. I tried to troubleshoot all the errors these tests gave me. It seems like I was fighting for hours just to move forward an inch. I’m understanding how everything was built and how everything works together, and it seems like the solution is just around the corner but I can’t see it. Nothing makes sense. Why these two servers are down makes no sense to me. They can see each other, they still replicate to each other, but they can’t talk to each other. If they can’t talk to each other, then no one else can talk to them, and we need them to so they could reach the internet. It’s strange.

Tomorrow I’m going to try a few more things and see if I shake anything loose. I called the company that set these servers up a few years ago, but I just got a voicemail. I left a message, but no one got back to me. I’m going to try a different number tomorrow and see if I can’t get somebody up here to figure this out. I’m thinking of working through the weekend to see if I can’t figure this out on my own. I’m confident I can, but I also don’t want to screw this up anymore than I already have. I’m taking it slow now. Doing more research, doing more tests, evaluating if what I’m looking at even needs to be done, and then carefully implementing the changes and observing how they work. If nothing happened, then I just reverted it back. Otherwise, I left it alone and hoped for the best.

Tomorrow is Friday. I thought today was Friday. I feel bad that this happened and that this disrupted everyone’s game plan for the week. I’d admit, I wanted to get this working today so I can be seen as the hero, but hell, I must’ve done something to cause this mess in the first place. What that was I don’t know. Been racking my brain all week. But hey, at least I didn’t feel like getting a drink today or stress eating. That’s progress.

Bad Day

Nothing was resolved today. I couldn’t get the network back up and running; in fact, I seem to have made it work. When people could once connect to the internet by an ethernet cable, now they can’t. The wireless is still down. It’s a weird issue, and the culprit has to be DNS, but the real culprit is probably Windows Update. I pushed out updates to every computer on the network last Friday, and I’ve been hearing reports about internet problems coming on Saturday. Something happened between Friday and Saturday, and I’m not sure what. Neither does Doc, the last tech guy, who came over to check it out. In fact, from around 7-10:30, we were trying to troubleshoot these issues together, and we couldn’t figure it out. What I’m going to have to do tomorrow is call the suppliers of our servers and see if they can send a network engineer over to check our setup.

It’s so weird. I don’t understand what’s going on, and everyone’s pissed at me at work because they can’t use the internet. I can’t ping our two domain controllers, but I can ping everything else. Our two main controllers are also our two main DNS servers, and everything connects to these DNS servers through DHCP. But since I can’t ping these two controllers, and everyone uses these servers for DNS, nothing can connect to the internet. These DNS servers exist; I can log on to them and use it like any other computer. The network just doesn’t see them. It’s like they don’t exist.

I don’t know what I could have done to fuck this up. I don’t know if it was even me. Maybe it was pushing out those Windows Updates. Or maybe it’s a hardware issue. Maybe I need to tick a checkbox somewhere and everything will be back to normal. All I know is that I think I’m doing fiddling and I’m ready to call in some experts. I wish I didn’t. I wish I just knew what was going on, but I don’t, and neither does Doc. We tried everything we knew to do and nothing.

I’m afraid I’ve lost all credibility at work. Hell, I’m afraid I’m going to get fired. I liked this job. This week was supposed to be simple. It was supposed to be a good week where I kickstarted a few projects I’ve had in mind. But life threw me this damn curveball, and I’ve struck out. I’m stressing out, and even though I feel better right now because I was able to talk it out with someone more knowledgable than me, the problem still remains, and I don’t know what to do.

I hope my brain can work through this problem overnight so I can have some sort of epiphany in the morning. I know the symptoms, but I just want to know the cause. If I know the cause, then I can attack it with all my might and fix it. But alas, I don’t. I don’t and it’s getting to me.

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