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I was meaning to reply earlier, but the afternoon got away from me and I wanted to send a proper note instead of a rushed sentence.
I ended up taking that longer route through the park, and it was actually the right call because everything felt lighter after that. I think sometimes stepping away for a bit helps more than trying to force an answer immediately. The thing you asked about does seem manageable, and if you keep it simple at the start, it probably will not feel so overwhelming.
I would begin with the easiest part first, then leave the tricky bits for later once the momentum is there. Also, give yourself more time than you think you need. Every time I assume I can fit three things into one evening, I end up finishing half of one and getting distracted by something weird in the kitchen or a stack of papers I forgot existed.
Anyway, that is my honest take, and I hope it helps a little.
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CVS
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I think you were probably right to wait a day before deciding, because once I actually slowed down and looked at everything, the answer felt much more obvious.
Usually I confuse movement with progress, and that is when I start doing tiny unnecessary tasks instead of the thing that matters. This time I wrote out a short list on paper, left it alone for an hour, and came back with a clearer head. It sounds ridiculously simple, but it worked better than pacing around and pretending I was thinking deeply.
I would not worry so much about getting it perfect from the first attempt. Most of these things improve once there is something concrete to react to, even if it starts off a little rough. I also think you should trust your first instinct more than you do. You notice details quickly, and that helps more than you realize.
Send me what you end up with when you are ready. I am glad to look it over and give a second opinion without overcomplicating it.