u/Additional_Young_170

Want a flexible side hustle that actually pays. We’re looking for reliable people to handle simple Reddit posting tasks.

All content is provided, so your only job is to post according to our instructions. No experience is necessary, and you can work entirely from home.

Why This Opportunity Is Great:

• Fully remote

• No voice calls or video meetings• Flexible working hours

• Beginner-friendly

Compensation:

• Earn between $10–$100 weekly

• Weekly PayPal payouts every Sunday

• More activity can lead to higher earnings

Requirements:

● Any device (phone, laptop, or PC)

● Verified PayPal

● Join this discord link: https://discord.com/invite/5cRnB8e3g

To Apply:

• Upvote this post

• Comment “Interested” with your available hours

• Message me directly

Slots are limited, and we’re onboarding immediately.

reddit.com
u/Additional_Young_170 — 16 days ago

January I made a goal to learn something new every month. Not master it but get a solid foundation. Wanted to become a more well-rounded person instead of just good at my job and nothing else.

Month 1: Tried learning chess from YouTube. Watched hours of videos. Still got destroyed by the easy bot. Turns out watching isn't learning.

Month 2: Bought a course on public speaking. Did two lessons. Course still sits at 8% complete.

Month 3: Downloaded Duolingo for Spanish. Hit a 40 day streak. Can say "the cat drinks milk" and not much else.

Month 4: This is when things changed. Switched my approach entirely.

Realized the problem wasn't motivation. It was format. Long videos lose me. Courses feel like homework. Apps that gamify everything make me chase streaks not actual skills.

Started using BeFreed. It's a personalized audio learning app. I'd pick a topic for the month, tell it what I wanted to learn, and do short audio sessions throughout the day.

Month 4 was negotiation. Month 5 was decision making frameworks. Month 6 was persuasion psychology. Month 7 was personal finance basics. Still going.

Why this format worked for me:

Audio fits my life. Sessions during commute, chores, walks.

Short chunks. 10-15 minutes. No commitment dread.

Flashcards forced retention. Got quizzed on concepts throughout the month so they actually stuck.

The AI coach answered dumb questions. Asked things I'd be embarrassed to google.

What I actually retained:

Can explain anchoring, BATNA, and the contrast principle from negotiation month.

Use second-order thinking at work regularly now.

Actually negotiated a better rate with my internet provider last week using what I learned.

Limitations:

Some skills need practice not knowledge. Can't learn guitar from audio.

Monthly rotation is too fast for complex topics. Some needed more time.

Content gaps on niche stuff.

Not saying everyone should do this. Just sharing what broke me out of the cycle of starting and quitting.

What skills are you trying to learn right now?

reddit.com
u/Additional_Young_170 — 17 days ago