Nope

Once you are fully accepting of your situation and not attached to constantly seeking happiness through things like video games and junk food, you become happy and calm. Here is an example:
Imagine you're watching some TV and having a good time <3. But then a thought races across your mind which reminds you about homework or assignments. Even the presence of this thought brings you some unhappiness and stress. Then you would put it off and try to watch more TV, but that just makes the problem worse -- every time the thoughts of work cross your mind they get more and more stressful as the deadline approaches. Eventually, you are forced to do your work to get the grades (or whatever) and start doing it, which brings you great stress and unhappiness -- especially since it's so close to the deadline. You might even feel like you don't have time to finish...
And the worst part about this is that it _repeats_. Every time you attach yourself to your current state of happiness (like watching TV) and push away the state of unhappiness (doing work), you teach yourself to do this more and more. Eventually your life becomes a cycle of seeking happiness through doing things that please the senses and trying to avoid things that your mind tells you are unpleasant.
And as such, you are constantly becoming stressed, unhappy, and worried.
So what do you do? Why is Garoth not stressed?
It's pretty easy, really. Do the opposite of the cycle. Don't attach yourself to your happiness. If you have no attachment to your current happy state -- like watching TV -- then you have no _reason_ to get upset when that state of mind is threatened. As such, you do work early and without any suffering attached. Your assignments are done, so you don't feel the pressure of deadlines. Eventually you find that you have more and more free time because you don't waste any in that state of avoidance of something that can't be avoided. You know the one -- you need to do work, so you go to the bathroom, check your e-mail, get a snack, read some news... and theeen get to the work.
I know, easier said than done -- but it's possible. This kind of method also works for just about anything else in life that upsets you.
Further reading: Buddhist philosophy.