Jeff Young

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Jeff Young

Jeff Young

@CatholicFoodie

Jeff Young, The Catholic Foodie. Writer. Poet. Holds an MFA from @stthomashouston. Cookbook: Around the Table with The Catholic Foodie: https://t.co/8Q3trmSv69

New Orleans, LA. Katılım Nisan 2007
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Ihtesham Ali
Ihtesham Ali@ihtesham2005·
A community college professor taught the same study skills lecture for 30 years, and the video quietly became one of the most watched educational recordings on the internet. His name is Marty Lobdell. He spent his career as a psychology professor watching students fail not because they were lazy, but because nobody had ever taught them how their brain actually works under the pressure of learning something hard. The lecture is called "Study Less Study Smart." Over 10 million views. Passed around in Reddit threads, Discord servers, and university study groups for over a decade. And the core insight buried inside it has been sitting in cognitive psychology research for years, waiting for someone to explain it in plain language. Here is the framework that completely changed how I think about effort. Your brain does not sustain focus the way you think it does. Studies tracking real students found that the average learner hits a wall somewhere between 25 and 30 minutes. After that, efficiency doesn't just decline. It collapses. You're still sitting at your desk, still looking at the page, but almost nothing is going in. Lobdell illustrated this with a student he knew personally. She set a goal of studying 6 hours a night, 5 nights a week, to pull herself out of academic probation. Thirty hours of studying per week. She failed every single class that quarter. She wasn't failing because she lacked effort. She was failing because she had confused time spent near books with time spent actually learning. The 25-minute crash hit her at 6:30pm every night. She spent the next five and a half hours sitting in the wreckage of her own focus and calling it studying. The fix sounds almost too simple. The moment you feel the slide, stop. Take five minutes. Do something that actually gives you a small reward. Then go back. That five-minute reset returns you to near full efficiency. Across a six-hour window, the difference is not marginal. It is the difference between thirty minutes of real learning and five and a half hours of it. The second thing he taught destroyed something I had believed about how memory actually works. Highlighting feels productive. Going back over your notes and recognizing everything feels like knowing. But recognition and recollection are two completely different cognitive processes, and your brain is very good at making you confuse them. You can see something you've read before and feel completely certain you understand it, even when you couldn't reconstruct a single sentence from memory if the page were blank. He proved this live in the room. He read 13 random letters to his audience. Almost nobody could recall them. Then he rearranged the same 13 letters into two words: Happy Thursday. The whole room got all 13 without effort. Same letters. Same count. The only thing that changed was meaning. The brain stores meaning. Not repetition. The moment new information connects to something you already understand, the retention changes entirely. This is what the cognitive psychology literature calls elaborative encoding, and it is the mechanism underneath every effective study technique. The third principle was the one that hit me hardest, and the one almost nobody applies. Lobdell cited research showing that 80 percent of your study time should be spent in active recitation, not passive reading. Close the material. Say it back in your own words. Teach it to someone else, or to an empty chair if no one is around. The struggle of retrieval is where the actual learning happens. Reading your notes again is watching someone else do the work. His parting line has stayed with me longer than almost anything else I have read about learning. He told the room that if what he shared didn't change their behavior, they hadn't actually learned it. It would just live in their heads as something they had heard once and felt good about. He was right. And most people leave every lecture exactly like that. The students who remember everything aren't putting in more hours. They stopped confusing the feeling of studying with the fact of it.
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Daniel Fitzpatrick
Daniel Fitzpatrick@Fitzthewriter·
Bezos is once again offering a discount on Restoring the Lord’s Day—a great chance to check out the book that, as @JMWSPT said, “renews and deepens the call of Josef Pieper to restore a true vision of human nature and our calling to leisure, stillness, and contemplation.”
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Jordan Haddad
Jordan Haddad@JHaddad01·
If you live in or around NOLA, come join us for a great lecture!
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Joie de Vivre
Joie de Vivre@JDVjournal·
"One Wednesday afternoon in early August 2014, I found myself at a table with Chef Leah Chase in her restaurant, Dooky Chase’s, in the heart of Treme." "The Work of Hospitality," an essay by @CatholicFoodie jdvjournal.com/archive/the-wo…
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Beata Productions
Beata Productions@beataproduction·
August 9th is the feast of St. Edith Stein. Flannery O'Connor admired Stein and also Hannah Arendt who articulated the concept of "the banality of evil" when describing the Holocaust. Reading O'Connor's story "The Displaced Person" is a good way to honor St. Edith Stein.
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Paul J. Pastor
Paul J. Pastor@pauljpastor·
New icon for the house; I appreciate that the New Creation is curled here like a snail.
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Jason Guriel
Jason Guriel@jasonguriel·
My book Fan Mail: A Guide to What We Love, Loathe, and Mourn goes to press today. (Gulp.) It has reviews, essays, attacks, obits, couplets, comic strips (by me), et al. If you're into entertaining criticism (on novels, movies, comics, poetry, and music) please preorder below.
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Daniel Cowper
Daniel Cowper@DanielCowper·
"Kingdom of the Clock is packed with vivid imagery and insightful phrasing. Cowper’s word choices and rhythms chime with brilliance throughout (“tonal phrases programmed / into flightpaths”)," writes Joe Enns in the BC Review. thebcreview.ca/2025/07/05/259…
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Daniel Cowper@DanielCowper

"A climax that is gasp-inducingly beautiful," gushes the reviewer for the Montreal Review of Books. She notes a secondary character could be more complex, which points at how the narrative structure of the poem invites indefinite elaboration. Noted for a 2nd edition someday!

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Matt Swaim
Matt Swaim@mattswaim·
Having done Church-related work for a couple decades, one of many lessons I've learned is this: If you're not involved in your local parish, your external efforts to spread or build up the faith will always ring a little hollow Parish life is a reality your soul needs 1/2
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Madonna House Apostolate
Madonna House Apostolate@MadonnaHouse·
Poustinias at our #Carmel Hill. "#Poustinia stands for prayer, penance, mortification, solitude, silence, offered in the spirit of love, atonement, and reparation to God! The spirit of the prophets of old!"#CatherineDoherty Our Lady of Mt Carmel, pray for us! [pic: Jenna Gernon]
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David Perell
David Perell@david_perell·
Went to a coffee shop. Barista introduced himself. Nice guy. Smiles easily. Went back. He said hello. Called me by my name. Now I’ve gone seven days in a row because the barista feels like a neighborhood friend, and that’s how low the bar for service is these days.
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Paul J. Pastor
Paul J. Pastor@pauljpastor·
I am honored to have *five* poems in the new summer issue of @readliberties, which is simply one of the top independent journals of any kind at the moment. And what company! Read it. Deep thanks to @Celestemarcus3, etc. and compliments to the team on another exceptional issue.
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