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What are ways to manage my stress while double majoring in acting and psychology ?
Hiii Im a senior and Im really excited to be attending NYU in the fall which I committed for acting but plan on double majoring which I can already tell is gonna be stressful so any advice is helpful!!
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Chinyere’s Answer
Hi Caileigh,
First, congratulations on New York University. That is a big achievement, and it is clear you have worked hard to reach this point. You also already understand something important: ambition is exciting, but it needs balance. Studying acting while double majoring in psychology can be rewarding, but it will require smart energy management.
The first step is to accept that you cannot do everything at full speed all the time. Some weeks your acting work may need more attention because of rehearsals, performances, or auditions. Other weeks psychology papers, exams, or research projects may take priority. Success will often come from adjusting focus, not trying to give 100 percent to every task every day.
Build a weekly planning system early. Use one calendar for classes, rehearsals, deadlines, study blocks, rest time, meals, and travel time. When your schedule lives only in your head, stress grows quickly. When it is visible, life feels more manageable. Even 15 minutes of planning each Sunday can save hours of panic later.
Protect your physical wellbeing like it is part of your coursework, because it is. Sleep, movement, hydration, and regular meals will affect your memory, mood, and performance. Acting especially asks a lot from your body and emotions, so recovery matters. Burning out helps neither major.
Learn to use campus resources early, not only when things feel heavy. Academic advisers, professors, counselling services, tutoring centres, and student support offices exist for moments exactly like this. Strong students ask for support before problems grow.
You will also need boundaries. There may be clubs, events, side projects, and social plans every week. Some opportunities are great, but saying yes to everything can quietly damage your wellbeing. Choose what truly aligns with your goals. A focused yes often requires several respectful no’s.
Since you are studying psychology, use what you learn on yourself. Practice stress tools such as breaking large tasks into smaller steps, noticing negative self-talk, using breathing exercises, and replacing perfectionism with progress. Many students suffer more from the pressure they place on themselves than from the workload itself.
Keep a reminder of why you chose both paths. Acting builds expression, empathy, presence, and storytelling. Psychology builds understanding of people, behaviour, and the mind. Those two fields can complement each other beautifully. On hard days, remembering your bigger purpose can steady you.
Lastly, allow yourself to revise the plan if needed. If double majoring becomes too heavy, changing pace, extending time, or adjusting goals is not failure. It is a wise decision-making. You sound driven and self-aware, which is a powerful combination. Start organised, stay flexible, and be kind to yourself while you grow into this next chapter.
Best wishes!
First, congratulations on New York University. That is a big achievement, and it is clear you have worked hard to reach this point. You also already understand something important: ambition is exciting, but it needs balance. Studying acting while double majoring in psychology can be rewarding, but it will require smart energy management.
The first step is to accept that you cannot do everything at full speed all the time. Some weeks your acting work may need more attention because of rehearsals, performances, or auditions. Other weeks psychology papers, exams, or research projects may take priority. Success will often come from adjusting focus, not trying to give 100 percent to every task every day.
Build a weekly planning system early. Use one calendar for classes, rehearsals, deadlines, study blocks, rest time, meals, and travel time. When your schedule lives only in your head, stress grows quickly. When it is visible, life feels more manageable. Even 15 minutes of planning each Sunday can save hours of panic later.
Protect your physical wellbeing like it is part of your coursework, because it is. Sleep, movement, hydration, and regular meals will affect your memory, mood, and performance. Acting especially asks a lot from your body and emotions, so recovery matters. Burning out helps neither major.
Learn to use campus resources early, not only when things feel heavy. Academic advisers, professors, counselling services, tutoring centres, and student support offices exist for moments exactly like this. Strong students ask for support before problems grow.
You will also need boundaries. There may be clubs, events, side projects, and social plans every week. Some opportunities are great, but saying yes to everything can quietly damage your wellbeing. Choose what truly aligns with your goals. A focused yes often requires several respectful no’s.
Since you are studying psychology, use what you learn on yourself. Practice stress tools such as breaking large tasks into smaller steps, noticing negative self-talk, using breathing exercises, and replacing perfectionism with progress. Many students suffer more from the pressure they place on themselves than from the workload itself.
Keep a reminder of why you chose both paths. Acting builds expression, empathy, presence, and storytelling. Psychology builds understanding of people, behaviour, and the mind. Those two fields can complement each other beautifully. On hard days, remembering your bigger purpose can steady you.
Lastly, allow yourself to revise the plan if needed. If double majoring becomes too heavy, changing pace, extending time, or adjusting goals is not failure. It is a wise decision-making. You sound driven and self-aware, which is a powerful combination. Start organised, stay flexible, and be kind to yourself while you grow into this next chapter.
Best wishes!