De-procrastinating

What to doSometimes I don’t start a task until the risks of further delay have become more stressful than the doing. There is always a seemingly legitimate distraction (like blogging!) available…

There is substantial research into this phenomenon. After a decade long meta-analysis project, Piers Steel said: “Essentially, procrastinators have less confidence in themselves, less expectancy that they can actually complete a task.”

So, to reduce procrastination, should I (a) increase stress associated with delays; or (b) make action less stressful?

Taking it as given that I am pleasure-seeking (not depressed) and that procrastination is about impulse control, here is a tentative strategy for reducing procrastination.

  1. Identify. Which task makes me feel most anxious? That is the task likely to waste my time and energy the most.
  2. Eliminate. Delegate stressful tasks to someone more capable, if possible. There is no point doing hard emotional work unless it is necessary.
  3. Calm. Always approach the stressful task via structured relaxation – a calming activity such as breathing, meditation, prayer, exercise, breadmaking.
  4. Socialise. Involve a friendly companion. ‘Belongingness’ soothes anxiety and builds confidence.
  5. Associate. Couple stressful tasks with satisfying activities. By this, associate good feelings with the unpleasant task.
  6. Atomise. Write targets that can be quickly achieved. Enjoy the feeling of success on completion of small steps.

Experiment begins….

References

  1. Image from http://www.wittysparks.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/10/confusion_1.jpg
  2. University of Calgary (2007, January 10). We’re Sorry This Is Late … We Really Meant To Post It Sooner: Research Into Procrastination Shows Surprising Findings. ScienceDaily. Retrieved May 5, 2008, from http://www.sciencedaily.comĀ­ /releases/2007/01/070110090851.htm
  3. Steel, Piers 2007, The Nature of Procrastination: A Meta-Analytic and Theoretical Review of Quintessential Self-Regulatory Failure. Psychological Bulletin, Vol 133(1), Jan 2007. pp. 65-94. [Journal Article]

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