Let me tell you what I saw the other day.
My dog, Cheeni, was trying to hide a biscuit in her bed like it was gold. She pushed it under her blanket, nudged it in deeper with her nose, then checked to see if it was still there. Again. And again. No distractions. No half-hearted attempts. Just total biscuit-hiding commitment.
It was ridiculous. It was adorable. And honestly? It was kind of inspiring…because here’s what hit me- when you really care about something, even something as silly as hiding a snack, you throw yourself into it. Fully.
Now picture this- you’re “doing homework,” but you’ve got a video playing on one tab, chat pinging on your phone, and your brain already halfway to the fridge. You finish it… sort of. But is it your best? Not even close. It’s like making tea with cold water. Technically, the steps are there but the magic isn’t.
Here’s the un-fun truth-you can always tell when someone has done something with one eye closed. It’s not subtle. It’s not “cool and effortless.” It’s more like “Why does this feel like it was scribbled on the school bus at 7:58 a.m.?”
But the second you give something your full attention, even just for ten focused minutes, you feel the difference. Your brain actually clicks into gear. You think more clearly. You notice things. You finish and go, “Huh. That wasn’t bad.”
Because doing something with all your heart? That’s not about marks or gold stars. It’s about not wasting your own time.
One of my favourite quotes is from Dr. Seuss-
“Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better. It’s not.”
And it’s true for everything…homework included. Whether you’re writing a paragraph, solving a math problem, designing a poster, or just tidying your bookshelf, do it like it matters. Because it does.
Trying your best doesn’t mean being perfect. It means giving whatever you’re doing a real shot. Not checking out before you’ve even begun. You might make mistakes. You might fall short. Who cares? Effort is what builds skill.
Quick story from my classroom:
One of my students once came up with a fantastic plot for a short story. Genuinely brilliant. But the handwriting looked like he wrote it while riding a rollercoaster. I looked at him and said, “Your brain gave 100%, but your hand gave about… 27.” He grinned. The next week? The handwriting was flawless. Same brain. Better effort.
That’s the stuff that sticks. That quiet satisfaction of knowing you showed up.
Way better than that nagging feeling of “Ugh. I could’ve done better.”
So the next time you sit down to do anything, literally anything, ask yourself:
Am I really trying, or just going through the motions?
Because the truth is, if it’s worth your time, it’s worth your full attention.
Even if it’s just hiding a biscuit.
Or finishing your homework. Especially your homework.
Ms Tanya Jayakrishnan
Academic Coordinator
Levels 6&7