Scar12346
My suggestion would be to talk to your school counselor or adviser. They can at least point you to resources for planning and getting started studying.
But first you need to seriously consider talk therapy. From what you said in this last post, it sounds like more than you don't know how to study and more like this is a big trigger/mental issue for you. Therapy can help with that. It took me eight years to complete college with the same therapist. With no therapy, I don't think there is any way I would have graduated.
Not to sound like someone's mom, but you can't avoid this. Being able to set goals and do the work to complete them is a necessity for adult life. Even if you don't want to continue school, every job requires this. I opened, unpacked, and repackaged office supplies and did light inventory as a part time minimum wage worker. Yes, I had to be able to handle challenges and complete planned objectives.
Applying for government aid, filing taxes, and organizing your appointments and med schedule, all require planning and sticking with it. I have a lot of experience with assisting others with government aid, welfare, food stamps, Medicaid apps and processes are complicated and difficult to manage.
There is no easy way to get or do anything. It sucks, but it is true for everybody.