>>28525985I have no idea if this is more of a vision issue or rep issue because I can see kanji clearly in chat.
Not sure how you are learning kanji but kanji are made up of something called radicals (think of words made up of letters). When seeing a kanji, you should be able to recognise the radicals in it. For instance, 曜 is made up of 日, 羽 and 隹. Try to see if you can spot them inside the kanji when reading it. You can also copy the kanji and paste it somewhere where you can enlarge if it's unclear. Overtime, you can easily spot them based on their general overall shape of the character without deciphering the radicals.
>Any recommendation on common time-related kanjis?If you know korean or Chinese it's basically the same equivalents in those languages. If not, you will just have brute force and memorise them like any other kanji.
That said, for days of the week you may have noticed that they are named after things like water, fire, gold etc. They are actually named after the planets (which were named after roman(?) Gods) and have some correspondence with our days of the week. If you look at monday and sunday it matches with 月曜日 (moon) and 日曜日 (sun). The correspondence is more obvious in romance languages but I don't know any to say about it. So if you know any it might aid you in remembering the days of the week.
Also you should use hiragana to denote the pronunciation of the kanji instead of romaji as training wheels.