Given your circumstances I would consider backing out. You'll be competing with people who are super all-in and it might be a long journey after GA too. If the cost isn't a factor then I would do your best but expect many more steps afterwards and repeating some of the stuff before you really get it.
u/JoshThePineapplee wrote (the comment Michael replied to):
I’m all in I plan to do this career the rest of my life that’s why I made the investment. This is all I want man I just don’t want to screw it up
u/michaelnovatireplied·
In my opinion you can't screw it up because rarely do people do down a linear fixed path once and absorb everything and it takes a lot of trial and error and tangents to get there.
The main thing is the cost (which can be the $$$ on GA but also the time and opportunity cost).
Everyone is different. I don't think there is a way to rush it on a fixed schedule - maybe you'll get there on a fixed schedule and maybe you won't but if you are committed to the journey just give enough room to fail and get back up.
u/JoshThePineapplee wrote (the comment Michael replied to):
You’re completely right thanks. I’m just gonna stick to it regardless. In my mind this is the only option anyways which may not be the healthiest but it guarantees I’m on my A game lol
Thanks for the input man anymore advice?
u/michaelnovatireplied·
Personally what works for me is practicing real stuff and hitting my head against the wall until I figure it out. So less reading and videos and more doing.