So I wanna know who has stopped sucessfully stopped procrastinating, because I would like to hear from you.
Here are some of the things to describe my procrastinating situation:
* I tend to leave things to the last minute. Most of the time it usually goes very well, unless I've heavely understimated the task which happens 1/10 times. Most of the things I need to do are important but not urgent, so they require to be proactive
* I get bored or distracted easily, I don't belive in ADHD, but according to the definition I definetly have it. So thats why I sometimes prefer tinker with a RPi on a project that has my interest instead of the ticket I know I can finish by just focusing 15min.
* I gravitate to being a night owl, but I like to be an easly bird. In a period of my life I was getting up at 5:45 and studying and excersicing. Getting up early made it that I can do tasks without distraction before anybody got up. Issue is my tendency to leave things till the last minute fucks up with sleep schedule making me a night owl for a couple of days and then fucking me up if I wanna go back to wake up early.
* As typical in procrastinators, I tend to ignore big tasks because they seem difficult or tedious, but when you start doing them most of the time I get into the flow in about 15mins into the task making me wonder why did I took so long to start the task.
* Most crucially, I fundamentally thing theres always "more time", which objectively and rationally I know this is not the case, but the way I manage myself during the day is: "Nah' I can do this later". When in reality its up to my most convinience to do that task right then and there.
* Also, you may relate to this, I have 2000 videos on my youtube watch later playlist and lost count on my "To read" bookmark on Chrome.
I wanna try new things this year, write goals quaterly and maybe look for a mantra, some word of escenario I can pop into my head to make me do what I need to do in that moment.
Thanks in advanced.
9 months ago I started a new job. It was a relatively senior role for me. Straight away my manager kicked my ass if I didn’t get stuff done. It was fully expected that I was a productive and competent member of the team. The prospect of loosing my job was very real. There is also no working from home so there is nowhere to hide. I quickly started focusing and putting in extra effort. For a while I had to put in extra time outside work to get up to standard but now I just work productively and go home.
When I work on my side projects I make far more progress far more quickly. I feel far better about work and life in general as I don’t feel like I’m wasting my time.
My advice is to put yourself in a situation that will demand a lot from you. Make sure you can’t make excuses and that you have someone/thing to hold you legitimately accountable to a high standard. It may be hard but in the long term it’ll help you reach your potential.
I don't think I 100% stopped procrastinating, but now I almost never think about it. No thinking, no reasoning, no excuses, no strategies, no prioritization, no schedulers, no productivity apps, no deals with myself. No search for motivation in the moment where I need it.
Just show up. With or without motivation, with or without optimal circumstances. Show up over and over again, without thinking.
ADHD isn’t some genetic on/off switch that determines whether you can focus or not, it’s a threshold for commonly-linked traits that indicates you may benefit enough from medication, routines, and special accommodations in certain circumstances that it’s worth it to try them and for you to be evaluated differently from people who don’t pass that threshold.
Not believing in ADHD is like not believing in charisma or any other observable set of traits.
Basically, if you're constantly applying willpower, you're doing something wrong. Stop trying to use a stopgap as a solution. (See link for details)
I spent most of the past decade (up to about 2 years ago) upset that I wasn't more productive, and mad at myself for not having any real hobbies outside video gaming. Now I'm more successful by my past standards (learning piano, writing, producing meaningful work doing something I like). More importantly to me, I've exited the emotional state of constantly beating myself up for not doing more.
Or you could just be tired. Take care of your body: sleep, exercise, diet. If you’re exhausted then you won’t be able to focus on anything.
> * I tend to leave things to the last minute. Most of the time it usually goes very well, unless I've heavely understimated the task which happens 1/10 times. Most of the things I need to do are important but not urgent, so they require to be proactive
Rather than trying to force yourself to be proactive, I found success by eliminating all my sources of distraction. After my wife put a passcode on my phone for using HackerNews and Reddit and YouTube, I magically found myself avoiding work less!
https://taylor.town/parental-self-controls
> * I get bored or distracted easily, I don't belive in ADHD, but according to the definition I definetly have it. So thats why I sometimes prefer tinker with a RPi on a project that has my interest instead of the ticket I know I can finish by just focusing 15min.
I recommend keeping a /now page with your personal "sprints" in the future. For me, what causes tinkering rabbit-holes is twofold:
- being afraid of not every getting back around to THE REALLY COOL IDEA
- not being realistic about how long the rabbit-hole will take compared to the rest of your wish-list
> * As typical in procrastinators, I tend to ignore big tasks because they seem difficult or tedious, but when you start doing them most of the time I get into the flow in about 15mins into the task making me wonder why did I took so long to start the task.
A lot of my procrastination comes from imagining that a task won't fit in an allotted block of time. I've made a personal mantra of "scrounging for between time".
https://taylor.town/between-time
> * Also, you may relate to this, I have 2000 videos on my youtube watch later playlist and lost count on my "To read" bookmark on Chrome.
Those lists will haunt you until you decide it's fake and unimportant!
Basically, the effectiveness of any productivity idea/hack starts out the most effective and interesting and then after a few weeks/months it usually starts to become less motivating. At that point, I know I need to either find a new idea or revamp my interest in the original plan.
For example, people will say to use a phone timer or hourglass or notebook or whiteboard in different articles. I have all those things, and once I accepted that cycling through them and adding new things to the rotation doesn't mean they failed it became much easier to keep the chain of not procrastinating going.
Along with this, I've also tried to accept that sometimes I won't notice the decrease in effectiveness until I've started to fail at something, and that's just part of the reset/switch period. If I'm aware of myself and notice things becoming harder, I can try to pre-empt the procrastination by looking for a new tactic. If I'm too busy or bored or stressed and I mess up my schedule, it's not going to last forever. Sometimes it's fine to pull an all-nighter. I think a reasonable amount is about once a month, but some people would try to do less.
https://alexvermeer.com/getmotivated/
I think procrastination is ultimately a mental/emotional problem and no amount of “productivity systems” can solve it. Turning inaction into action is where the rubber meets the road and What prohibits it from meeting is the incongruence inside you. One part of you wants something but your mind is fighting you all the time when you try to do it/get it
I tried many techniques for like 15 years because my procrastination and laziness were the bane of my existence. Nothing worked except this. Some stuff worked temporarily but nothing was a fix like this. It took some time for my brain to adjust but it worked wonders.
Summary: Start everything immediately and finish early Space things out to avoid high peak stress if possible
I also imagine that I'm trying to build a wall out of bricks, rather than focusing on the wall (end goal), I just have to put one brick. Feeling sad? Place another brick. Bad day? Place another brick. Didn't get a raise? Place another brick.
Then increase first number while decreasing second number. Just try to beat the previous day by a bit.
If you finish all your work, ask boss for more.
There are many ways its created, but at the end of the day one needs to work on these issues
For example, one of the reasons is to be confronted with the results... That I'm not good enough
You are welcome to email, see my profile