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Reddit mentions of The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Teens: The Ultimate Teenage Success Guide

Sentiment score: 3
Reddit mentions: 4

We found 4 Reddit mentions of The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Teens: The Ultimate Teenage Success Guide. Here are the top ones.

The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Teens: The Ultimate Teenage Success Guide
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Release dateOctober 1998
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Found 4 comments on The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Teens: The Ultimate Teenage Success Guide:

u/Lunatic14 · 3 pointsr/highschool

7 Steps for the Highly Effective Teen

EDIT: Link: http://www.amazon.com/dp/0684856093

u/TheBWF · 3 pointsr/getdisciplined

Thank you :) I’ll definitely up that book.



I think a big part of the reason I’m doing so great today is because of my story.



When I began in 1st grade, I wanted no friends. I had no friends, and I got bullied-ish until around 3-4th grade. I used to beat people, and I always wanted to be the “cool” person. At this point, I don’t think I ever cried to any of my "friends".


In 4th grade, I became a nicer person. I will never forgot this year. It was amazing.



However, in 6th grade things were a lil’ off again. Many people at my school, including me began with that “tough act” again. We began joking with the teachers, some tried to smoke, and no one gave a shit about school.



In the end of 6th grade, I met this person. He looked like a nice person. Although, he was two-three years older than I was. We hung out every day. We messed up everything we saw, stole candy from the store, and annoyed people, and so on.




One day, in the middle of 7th grade I decided to drop out of school. When I came home, everyone realized that I have skipped school. The teachers tried to make me admit it for at least 2 weeks, every day. I never admitted it. I have no clue why they really wanted me to admit it so bad, but they destroyed all my connection to teachers. I felt like I they did not like me, ever. We did not have grades, but we had tests. I did terrible.



One year later, I started in 8th grade. I felt like these teachers knew how to handle things. I felt like this was a new start. I really loved school and my life at this time. I became a nice person, and I had brilliant grades. I was in complete shock- that a person with ADHD that has never ever understood much in school could get good grades. It felt great.



Now, I’m in 9th grade. My grades are still all right.
To this day, I’m probably concentrating more in school than the average person in my class.
My life is great, but it’s much to improve.
Just wanted to share this.


Eddit: Found it right here, thanks buddy :)

u/agrassroot · 1 pointr/getdisciplined

First, good on you man. It's hard (maybe folly) to give advice to someone you don't know, so I'll just share what worked for me at your age to now. Around your age I started to journal. I struggled to start and keep routines and recognized that the routine would be helpful so I stuck at it. I felt like I got to formalize a conversation I was absent-mindedly having with myself.

The other thing I did was attempt to calmly observe your mind and experience. It seems clear to me now (but wasn't always the case) that our continuous experience (an unending stream of now) is a projection modeled from the sensory input of our 'senses'. That model is very good, but it's worthwhile to remember that you are just assuming there is a room behind you. You haven't seen it for a couple of minutes and for all likelihood it is still there, but you confidence that anything is 'there' is just a consequence of all the times things continued to be there. Your thoughts and model of yourself is very similar in that we assume it continues to be there without looking at it, but in this case - you've never actually looked at the thing doing the looking and just assume it has to be there all along because ... I guess it would be awkward :/


A couple of reading recommendations

  • The Diamond Sutra

  • Plato's Republic

  • 7 Habits of Highly Effective Teens

  • Autobiography of Ben Franklin

    The 7 Habits Book is written for people your age, but you can equivalently read the 'adult' version titled "7 Habits of Highly Effective People"

    I'd also recommend what others have said here about eating well, staying active, learning and reflecting daily (journaling), and deliberately making yourself a little uncomfortable on a routine basis. Also find and hone your art, whatever that may be.
u/diodeforjustice · 1 pointr/fffffffuuuuuuuuuuuu

Send her a bunch of literature about overcoming porn addiction. You could also send her this book.