Alright, let’s talk about this ‘ostepenko’ thing. It wasn’t exactly about the tennis player herself, not directly anyway, but more about a phase I went through, a sort of practical experiment I ran on myself a while back.

I was feeling kinda stuck, you know? Like running in circles on a project. It wasn’t even a big work thing, just some personal stuff I was trying to sort out, organizing a huge mess of old digital photos and notes. Felt overwhelming. Everything I tried was too slow, too fiddly.
Then, one evening, I was just zoning out, watching some sports highlights. Saw a clip of Jeļena Ostapenko playing. Wham! Ball just flies off her racket. Sometimes it’s an amazing winner, sometimes it sails way out. High risk, high reward, super aggressive. No messing about.
And it hit me. Maybe I was being too careful with my organizing project. Too much planning, not enough doing. I thought, okay, let’s try the ‘ostepenko’ approach. Forget perfection for now. Just go for it. Aggressively.
My ‘Ostapenko’ Method Trial
So, the next day, I decided to just dive in. Here’s kinda how it went:
- Step 1: Quick Scan. Instead of detailed analysis, I just quickly skimmed through batches of files. If something looked obviously like junk or a duplicate, boom, gone. No second guessing. Felt a bit scary, honestly.
- Step 2: Rough Categories. Didn’t try to make perfect folders. Just made really broad categories like ‘Family Stuff’, ‘Old Work Junk’, ‘Random Screenshots’, ‘Maybe Keep’. Threw files in fast.
- Step 3: Big Chunks First. Focused on the biggest folders and file types first. Video files, huge archives. Dealt with those heavy hitters to make a quick dent.
- Step 4: Ignore the Small Stuff (For Now). All those tiny text files and weird little images? Left ’em. Decided I’d circle back only if I really had to.
It was messy. Seriously messy. I definitely deleted a couple of things I probably shouldn’t have in my haste. A few photos went into the wrong ‘Maybe Keep’ pile. It wasn’t elegant. It was brute force.
But you know what? It worked. Sort of. In a couple of hours, I’d blasted through a mountain of digital clutter that had been stressing me out for months. The sheer volume was down. It wasn’t perfectly organized, not by a long shot, but it was manageable now. It felt like hitting a bunch of risky winners – some went out, but enough went in to clear the court.
So, yeah. My little ‘ostepenko’ experiment. It showed me that sometimes, just going full throttle, accepting a bit of chaos and imperfection, is the only way to break through feeling stuck. You might make a few unforced errors, but you also make progress. Sometimes you just gotta swing hard and see what happens.