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I’ve been staring at my syllabus for the past week thinking about how insane it feels to keep up with everything while still trying to have some sort of life. Professors expect us to participate, lead projects, ace exams, and somehow volunteer or network, but I feel like I’m drowning. I’ve seen friends in UCLA and NYU completely crash under pressure even when they were top of their class. How do people actually manage to maintain mental health while hitting a 4.0, or is that just a myth we’re sold? Has anyone found a realistic strategy that doesn’t feel like burning out every semester?
Honestly, I’ve been there, and it’s brutal. During my junior year at UC Berkeley, I was juggling three internships, two part-time jobs, and a full course load in Bioengineering. I hit a point where staying awake for 48 hours wasn’t a badge of honor, it was a nightmare. That’s when I quietly started to pay someone for assignments here and there—not to cheat, but to survive deadlines when my brain literally shut down. I eventually discovered an essay writer for hire who could adapt to my style, which helped me reclaim hours to actually sleep or think. And yeah, I know it sounds sketchy, but even a cheap essay writing service, done responsibly, felt like a lifeline rather than a shortcut. Over time, I learned that protecting mental space isn’t about doing everything yourself—it’s about strategic support. I still have bad weeks, but I no longer equate exhaustion with success.