Cramming is an art, and the most important lesson learned by any university student. Essentially, one puts off a great many tasks assigned during a course such as reading and reviewing notes, thinking that surely one will have time to deal with them later. Soon enough, later arrives and it is a day or two before the final exam that’s worth 75% of your course grade.

Only fools cram in libraries. Libraries lack the basic facilities needed for cramming. The first necessity for cramming is some sort of stimulant: I prefer Earl Grey Tea. As well as stimulating the mind, the tea provides a rhythm. You read a chapter, drink a cup, and take a break to refill. Between pots you can take a longer break, during which you make more tea. Another key rhythm that’s established accomplishes the dual task of going to the bathroom and refilling the kettle with which water is boiled for tea. Maintaining this elaborate, but easy, dance keeps one mind adequately focused on the work at hand, while exorcising the demons of distraction and tiredness.

Many people will tell you that distraction must be entirely avoided while cramming. These people are either of a different mental constitution than I, or have missed a vital part of cramming: perfect distraction. One must be just distracted enough that one doesn’t get bored and go find something else to do. For example, the right kind of music, at the right volume, can hold back the desire to go noding on e2 while you prepare for your exam. What sort of music ought to be used varies by personal preference and by the nature of what is being studied.

Another way in which crammers attain perfect distraction is by eating. Eating small amounts of something that takes a small effort to eat, like sunflower seeds, both adds to perfect distraction and delays the necessity of actually leaving the room to consume a meal. Meals are a certain way of losing valuable cramming time.

One final word of advice: do not become overconfident in your cramming abilities. For example, you may think that you have a sufficient skill at cramming that you can take a break from the tea-and-read cycle to write an e2 post on cramming. While I haven’t the wit to act on this knowledge, hopefully you shall.

Cramming is not a last-ditch effort or something done exclusively by slackers. The Communist Manifesto was written in an overnight cram session as were numerous Bills of Parliament including the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Acquiring the ability to focus and achieve things under pressure is valuable indeed.