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How to Avoid Stress During RBI Grade B Phase 1 Revision

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Are you revising the syllabus for the RBI Grade B Phase 1 exam and getting ready to face the exam on October 18, 2025? But during revision, you feel low, you get irritable or angry, struggle to sleep, or don’t eat properly, or think negative thoughts, are worried about your future, or feel fatigued? If any of these things is pestering you, you are a victim of stress. If so, this blog might be its medicine. Let’s agree that many of you might already be feeling the pressure. Long hours of revision, incomplete targets, and the thought of the exam day can build stress. It’s normal. Stress is just your body’s way of responding to pressure. At times, it can help you focus. But when it’s too much, it can block your energy. If you’re feeling restless, anxious, or unable to revise properly, this blog is for you. Let’s look at practical ways toppers used to avoid stress and revise effectively.

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Tips to Revise Without Stress

Revision is not only about books and notes. It is also about keeping your mind calm and your body active. Stress can break focus and reduce recall. That’s why toppers treat revision like a smart process, not just long study hours. In this section, we’ll go through the most practical tips backed by research and proven by toppers’ own experiences. Follow them step by step to revise the syllabus quickly and confidently while keeping stress away.

1. Cut Revision into Simpler Stages

Toppers never take the entire syllabus in one go. They divide revision into small tasks that are actually achievable. For example, revising only five schemes in General Awareness instead of trying to cover an entire month’s PDF in one sitting. This keeps the mind fresh and avoids overwhelm. 

Research shows that breaking big tasks into small chunks improves recall by 25%. PracticeMock’s topic-wise tests are a great way to apply this strategy. Each small win builds confidence and reduces exam stress naturally.

2. Use Mock Tests to Manage Anxiety

Most aspirants fear the unknown. Mock tests make the exam environment familiar. Toppers take mocks not just for practice, but also to train their minds to stay calm under time pressure. A study from Cambridge highlighted that timed practice reduces exam-day anxiety by over 30%. 

Start with the free RBI Grade B Phase 1 mock test. Then, gradually attempt all 11 mocks by PracticeMock. After each mock, analyze mistakes. This process lowers anxiety because you already know what to expect.

3. Focus on High-Scoring Areas First

During revision, toppers don’t chase the entire syllabus equally. They focus on high-scoring sections first. For RBI Grade B Phase 1, this means General Awareness, Reasoning sets you’re good at, and your strongest areas in Quant and English. Securing marks here gives a huge mental boost. 

Data from past exams proves GA holds the maximum weightage, nearly 40%. Revising Bazooka PDFs daily for 30 minutes is enough. When you see yourself scoring high in mocks, stress drops because you know the game is in your control.

4. Follow a Fixed Daily Routine

Stress increases when you study randomly. That’s why toppers stick to a clear daily routine. Fixed study hours, fixed revision slots, fixed sleep timings. This makes the brain expect and prepare for learning. A study published at PubMed titled ‘The Role of Daily Activities in Youths’ Stress Physiology’, has shown that regular routines lower cortisol (the stress hormone) and improve Youths’ attention. 

For instance, your own revision routine can go like this. Revise GA in the morning, then solve Quant/Reasoning questions in the afternoon, and invest the evening hours in practicing English questions. A simple structure removes confusion about what to do next. So, when there is no confusion, there is no stress, and more productivity follows.

5. Practice Relaxation Techniques

Even toppers feel stress before exams. But they learn to manage it pretty smartly. They embrace simple breathing exercises and go for short walks. In short, even 10 minutes of meditation can help calm your brain and motivate you to speed up your revision process and keep improving. To prove this, research from Harvard Medical School shows mindful breathing reduces stress by almost 40%.

So,  close your eyes, take deep breaths, and relax before taking a mock test or starting revision. This small habit resets your brain. It clears all the distractions and prepares you for a focused revision. And this is how toppers stay stress-free.

6. Track Your Progress Daily

One major reason aspirants feel stressed is not knowing how much they’ve achieved. Toppers avoid this by tracking their daily progress. They write down how many topics were revised, how many questions solved, and mock test scores. A progress tracker shows improvement over time. Even a 2 to 3 mark increase in a mock boosts confidence. 

Data from learning psychology proves visible progress builds motivation and lowers anxiety. Use a simple notebook. When you see growth, stress automatically reduces.

7. Take Care of Sleep and Nutrition

Revision doesn’t mean sacrificing health. Toppers give equal importance to rest and food. Lack of sleep affects memory and makes stress worse. According to the WHO, poor sleep reduces learning efficiency by 30 to 40%. So, take 7 to 8 hours of proper rest and have a nutritious diet. 

Because if you go for oily or heavy food, you’ll become sluggish. And sluggish candidates are bad at revision. So, you should only give a go to light meals, fruits, nuts, and drink a lot of water. A healthy body gives birth to a focused mind. Remember, no revision works well if your health breaks down.

8. Revise Smart, Not Long

Toppers know sitting for endless hours is counter-productive. They know well that long and unplanned hours of revision just invite fatigue and stress. They revise in short, fully attentive sessions of 40 to 50 minutes. And this is followed by 10-minute breaks. This is based on the Pomodoro technique, which is a proven method to boost the ability to retain whatever is learnt. 

Instead, use PracticeMock PDFs for quick revisions and short notes. Smart revision means touching key points again and again, not rereading the same chapter endlessly. It saves energy, reduces pressure, and makes learning more effective.

Final Thoughts

Now you well know that stress before exams is not just bothering you; it attacks almost all the candidates alike. It is perfectly normal to get stressed. But what matters is how you handle it. Toppers perfect the art of managing it with proven strategies, the ones we’ve discussed above. So, breaking revision into small tasks, using mocks to control anxiety, focusing on high-scoring areas, and following a routine are their biggest weapons. To conclude, start training your mind to relax, track your progress properly, and maintain healthy habits to make revision less stressful and more productive. 

PracticeMock resources like mock tests, topic-wise tests, Bazooka PDFs, PIB Sutra, and a concise PDF course are all perfectly crafted to fit into this smart revision plan. Use these amazing resources well, and you’ll walk into the exam hall with utmost confidence to clear the exam in first attempt.

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FAQs

1. How can i avoid stress during Phase 1 revision?

Yes, you can. Stress reduces when you follow a fixed study routine. Regular breaks, proper sleep, and mock test practice keep you calm and focused.

2. How much sleep should I take before the exam?

At least 7 hours daily. Less sleep increases stress and lowers focus. Good sleep sharpens memory and helps you recall better in the exam hall.

3. Should I study everything or only important topics?

Don’t try to cover everything. Focus on high-weightage topics and repeat them with mock tests. Selective smart revision cuts stress in half.

4. How do mock tests help reduce stress?

Mocks simulate the real exam. When you practice daily, exam fear goes away. You become confident, know your weak spots, and manage time better.

5. What should I do if I feel anxious before the exam?

Pause for 5 minutes. Breathe deeply. Revise only short notes or formulas, not full chapters. Avoid new topics. Calmness improves your performance more than last-minute cramming.

Asad Yar Khan

Asad specializes in penning and overseeing blogs on study strategies, exam techniques, and key strategies for SSC, banking, regulatory body, engineering, and other competitive exams. During his 3+ years' stint at PracticeMock, he has helped thousands of aspirants gain the confidence to achieve top results. In his free time, he either transforms into a sleep lover, devours books, or becomes an outdoor enthusiast.

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