Don't try to do three things at once. Two at once is enough.
I used to teach at Business Schools ("from the coalface" stuff about practical application of the theory). It was very apparent that for any individual student, 80% or so of what they learned was irrelevant to what they were going to do. Some hadn't a clue, for example, on investment analysis - which is a critical skill for those spending serious money.
Decide what you want to do first, then decide the right path to get there. If you don't know where you're going, any path will take you there.