Game Out Your Fears When Studying for the GMAT

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Game Out Your Fears

If spending time imagining worst-case scenarios makes maintaining a positive mindset for studying feel impossible, there’s a counterintuitive but highly productive fix. Play those scenarios out to their logical conclusions in your mind, and then put contingency plans in place to deal with them!

For example, if you don’t hit your score goal on test day, do you have a backup plan in place? Have you left yourself time for a GMAT retake, or two, or three?

If you’re worried you won’t have enough time each week to study, have you sat down with a calendar and actually “penciled in” study times for yourself? What will you do if you really don’t see enough time in your schedule? What other activities can you set aside for the time being to make room for GMAT prep? What steps do you need to take and who do you need to talk with to reprioritize?

By gaming out your fears and creating contingency plans, you take negative thoughts and turn them into positive actions. The great benefit of doing so is that then you’re prepared for whatever happens. Moreover, you don’t have to worry about those things anymore. You’ve planned for the worst-case scenarios, so what else is left to do but work toward the best-case one!

Warmest regards,

Scott Woodbury-Stewart
Founder & CEO, Target Test Prep

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Oh, so interesting. Thank you for sharing with me