tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4443722834139095121.post1731796284505627727..comments2016-05-12T09:39:35.961-07:00Comments on Economics of Reality: Experiences and LearningGlenn Hubbard Econ 490 Fall 2015http://www.blogger.com/profile/16140673497561022154noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4443722834139095121.post-85946329975299817902016-05-12T09:39:35.961-07:002016-05-12T09:39:35.961-07:00You get up at 8:30? I wonder if you've experi...You get up at 8:30? I wonder if you've experimented with that. Once you start full time work, the time you get up will largely be determined by the job. One summer when I was in college I worked near the World Trade Center, close to ground zero. The commute was about an hour. I was supposed to be at the office around 8 AM. You can work through the rest. I know kids your age like to sleep in. Now I admire that capacity, because I can't do it myself. But it should be for the weekends. If you need eight hours then going to bed at 11 makes sense. You might consider experimenting with that change to your schedule. <br /><br />Your post was very arm's length - analytic but without a sense of passion. You might ask what it would take get more passion into the writing and what sort of experiments would produce that. Professor Arvanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15256000730474030475noreply@blogger.com