Getting in the habit of dropping in a google group for any new project - 
everyone tends to be so helpful.

I work in the automotive sales industry(management) and find myself doing so 
many day to day tasks that could easily be automated. I'm a very tech saavy 
person, but after running in fear from a Javascript class in undergrad 8 years 
ago I haven't ever looked back. I simply had no interest because I saw no 
applications. 

Now that I have a solid career I see SO many applications for programming in my 
industry alone. Automating data movement/calculations from websites, 
spreadsheets, pricing, etc will be my primary use. I'm OK saying I didn't 
retain 1% of what I learned in the Javascript class, I've dabbled in HTML, I've 
tweaked code in Excel macros or AutoIt scripts, but I'd classify myself as a 
complete beginner in programming. 

Like a kid, I learn by tearing things apart and watching them tick. I have 
started the Code Academy on Python, but I'm not sure a constant IV dosage of 
adderall could keep my attention. I also run into exercises that absolutely 
lose me and I have to spend 30 minutes googling a solution because the lesson 
and hints are useless. 

My question to you guys is... for someone like me, what route would you take to 
learning Python? "Learn Python the Hard Way" sounds like a good route, but I 
prefer some testimony before I make a purchase. Again, I understand the details 
are the building blocks of programming, but I don't think I can handle writing 
10 lines of true/false (boolean right?) calculations on Code Academy only for 
the next course to speak a foreign language to me. Any other methods you would 
suggest? I've even considered auditing a college class if I can find one for 
Python.

Thanks in advance!
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