Alright, so the topic for today’s “practice session” was, let’s just say, a bit out there: “kourtney kardashian naked.” Yeah, you heard me. My first thought was, “Okay, how am I supposed to ‘practice’ with that?” But, you know, a task is a task.

So, I sat down, fired up the old machine, and stared at the screen for a minute. What’s the practical application here? What am I supposed to document or learn? I typed it into a search bar, because what else are you gonna do? And, predictably, the internet did its thing. A whole avalanche of images, links, articles, opinions – the usual digital chaos you’d expect. I clicked around a bit, scrolled through some pages. My “practice” pretty much consisted of observing the sheer volume of… well, stuff that exists online related to that search.
So, what was the actual takeaway?
Honestly? Not much in the way of useful skills or groundbreaking insights. It mostly made me think about how easy it is to get sidetracked. You go looking for one thing, or in this case, you’re given a “topic to practice,” and you end up just… browsing. It’s a bit like walking into a massive library with no catalog and no specific book in mind. You just wander.
It reminded me of this one time I was trying to learn how to properly prune my rose bushes. I started by looking up a simple guide. An hour later, I was deep in forums debating the merits of different fertilizer brands, watching videos about pest control in South America, and somehow reading about the history of garden gnomes. My roses? Still unpruned. My “practice” session had completely derailed into a general internet wander-fest. I gained a lot of random information, sure, but the original goal was totally lost.
And that’s kind of what this “kourtney kardashian naked” practice felt like. It’s a topic that generates a lot of clicks, a lot of noise, but not much substance if you’re trying to actually do something or learn something concrete. It’s like those clickbait articles, you know? They promise something sensational, but you click through five pages of ads and then the actual content is two sentences long and says nothing new.
My big “realization” from this particular practice session? It’s that not all topics are created equal for actual, productive practice. Some things are just black holes for your attention. You pour in time, you click around, and at the end, you haven’t really built anything, fixed anything, or improved any real skill. You’ve just… looked at stuff. And maybe that’s the lesson itself: learning to identify what’s a genuine learning opportunity and what’s just a distraction. This one? Definitely felt more like the latter. Time to go find something I can actually get my teeth into.
