| SolveYourProblem
Article Series: Procrastination
I'll Do It Later, Procrastinator
Change
Your Perspective On Procrastination
One damaging aspect of procrastination is
the way it tends to snowball and build a chronic
sense of stagnation and inertia in your life. It usually starts innocently enough:
you try to avoid doing one thing that feels intimidating or
unpleasant, and before you know it you’re avoiding even things
you want to do but feel too frightened to face. If this trend
continues long enough, your entire life can become extremely
messy and complex.
When you consider that one of the biggest causes of procrastination
is the perception that a task is too big or difficult to handle,
it’s easy to see why you would want to put it off. Few people
actually enjoy being challenged, so it seems easier to keep
putting it off until you feel better able to handle it in the
future.
There’s a great way to handle this type of procrastination,
and that is by changing your perspective to one that is
more manageable. Rather than trying to psyche yourself up to tackle
a big project or task all at once, attack it in bite-sized
pieces.
As an example, let’s use organization. Imagine that your home
is a terrible mess, completely disorganized with big piles
of clutter all over the place. It seems like an impossible
challenge to get it all straightened out, so you keep procrastinating.
To make matters worse, all of the clutter makes you feel overwhelmed
and scattered, which adds to the illusion that you can’t handle
the task of getting organized – which causes you to procrastinate
even more! It becomes a big, vicious cycle that will continue
until you take control of it.
Rather than trying to overcome your fear and push yourself
to tackle such a huge job, start with one drawer, one closet,
or any small section. This more focused approach usually works
like a charm because it’s hard to get overwhelmed by such a
tiny chore, so you find your tendency to procrastinate disappears
for a short time, enabling you to make some progress.
Then, simply keep the process going! Each day do a little
more, and work your way through small sections of the larger
task. This is very important – you can’t make a little progress
only once in a while because nothing will change over the long-term.
And if you don’t see consistent progress, you probably won’t
continue putting in the effort.
If you instead do a little bit each day, you’ll begin to notice
the positive results piling up. Before you know it, you’re
feeling more in control of your circumstances and you’re not
procrastinating nearly as much as you did before.
Once you’ve completed a larger task, then you can maintain
it in the same way you resolved it – little by little, day
by day!
Click here to learn exactly how to stop procrastinating and get stuff done. It's my SolveYourProblem recommendation.
# # # # #
by SolveYourProblem.com
: 2008
> Home > Procrastination
Articles : Main Page
|