The Truth About Procrastination - What We Never Though Before

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We often hear this word, right ? Millions of people tried to get rid of from this bad habit. There are more than 500 books sold promising to snap you out from your bad habit.

I have already read so many books related to personal development, particularly for procrastination. Finally I come to conclusion that we may think about it incorrectly.

We just think procrastination is caused we are lazy and we can't manage our time well. That's could be our perception exist in our mind. But do you think that perception is correct ? I don't think so. Hence, what actually makes us procrastinate all the thing we are going to do ? See my explanation below.

A study conducted in 1999 by Read, Loewenstein, and Kalyanaraman had people pick three movies out of a selection of twenty-four. Some were lowbrow, like Sleepless in Seattle or Mrs. Doubtfire. Some were highbrow, like Schindler's List or The Piano. In other words, it was a choice between movies that promised to be fun and forgettable and those that would be memorable but required more effort to absorb. After picking, the subjects had to watch one movie right away. They then had to watch another in two days and a third two days after that. Most people picked Schindler's List as one of their three. They knew it was a great movie because all of their friends said it was, and it had earned dozens of the highest awards. Most didn't, however, choose to watch it on the first day. Instead, people tended to pick lowbrow movies on the first day. Only 44 percent went for the heavier stuff first. The majority tended to pick comedies, like The Mask, or action flicks, like Speed, when they knew they had to watch their choice forthwith. Planning ahead, people picked highbrow movies 63 percent of the time for their second movie and 71 percent of the time for their third. When they ran the experiment again but told subjects they had to watch all three selections back-to- back, Schindler's List was thirteen times less likely to be chosen at all. The researchers had a hunch people would go for the junk food first, but plan healthy meals in the future.

Many studies over the years have shown you tend to have time-inconsistent preferences. When asked if you would rather have fruit or cake one week from now, you will usually say fruit. A week later, when the slice of German chocolate and the apple are offered, you are statistically more likely to go for the cake.

You weigh yourself. You buy a workout DVD. You order a set of weights. One day you have the choice between going for a run or watching a movie, and you choose the movie. Another day you are out with friends and can choose a cheeseburger or a salad. You choose the cheeseburger. The slips become more frequent, but you keep saying you'll get around to it. You'll start again on Monday, which becomes a week from Monday. Your will succumbs to a death by a thousand cuts. By the time winter comes, it looks like you already know what your resolution will be the next year. Procrastination manifests itself within every aspect of your life.

You wait until the last minute to buy Christmas presents. You put off seeing the dentist, or getting that thing checked out by the doctor, or filing your taxes. You forget to register to vote. You need to get an oil change. There is a pile of dishes getting higher in the kitchen. Shouldn't you wash clothes now so you don't have to waste a Sunday cleaning everything you own?

Perhaps the stakes are higher than choosing to play Angry Birds instead of doing sit-ups. You might have a deadline for a grant proposal, or a dissertation, or a book. You'll get around to it. You'll start tomorrow. You'll take the time to learn a foreign language, to learn how to play an instrument. There's a growing list of books you will read one day.

You can try to fight it back. You can buy a daily planner and a to-do list application for your phone. You can write yourself notes and fill out schedules. You can become a productivity junkie surrounded by instruments to make life more efficient, but these tools alone will not help, because the problem isn't you are a bad manager of your time - you are a bad tactician in the war inside your brain.

Thinking about thinking--this is the key. In the struggle between should versus want, some people have figured out something crucial: Want never goes away. Procrastination is all about choosing want over should because you don't have a plan for those times when you can expect to be tempted. You are really bad at predicting your future mental states. In addition, you are terrible at choosing between now and later. Later is a murky place where anything could go wrong.

If I were to offer you $50 now or $100 in a year, which would you take? Clearly, you'll take the $50 now. After all, who knows what could happen in a year, right? OK, so what if I instead offered you $50 in five years or $100 in six years? Nothing has changed other than adding a delay, but now it feels just as natural to wait for the $100. After all, you already have to wait a long time. A being of pure logic would think, more is more, and pick the higher amount every time, but you aren't a being of pure logic. Faced with two possible rewards, you are more likely to take the one that you can enjoy now over one you will enjoy later - even if the later reward is far greater. In the moment, rearranging the folders on your computer seems a lot more rewarding than some task due in a month which might cost you your job or your diploma, so you wait until the night before. If you considered which would be more valuable in a month - continuing to get your paycheck or having an immaculate desktop - you would pick the greater reward. The tendency to get more rational when you are forced to wait is called hyperbolic discounting, because your dismissal of the better payoff later diminishes over time and makes a nice slope on a graph.

One of the best ways to see how bad you are at coping with procrastination is to notice how you deal with deadlines.

A research was conducted to a selection of students in 2002 by Klaus Wertenbroch and Dan Ariely. They set up three classes, and each had three weeks to finish three papers. Class A had to turn in all three papers on the last day of class, Class B had to pick three different deadlines and stick to them, and Class C had to turn in one paper a week. Which class had the better grades? Class C, the one with three specific deadlines, did the best. Class B, which had to pick deadlines ahead of time but had complete freedom, did the second best, and the group whose only deadline was the last day, Class A, did the worst. Students who could pick any three deadlines tended to spread them out at about one week apart on their own. They knew they would procrastinate, so they set up zones in which they would be forced to perform. Still, overly optimistic outliers who either waited until the last minute or chose unrealistic goals pulled down the overall class grade. Students with no guidelines at all tended to put off their work until the last week for all three papers. The ones who had no choice and were forced to spread out their procrastination did the best because the outliers were eliminated. Those people who weren't honest with themselves about their own tendencies to put off their work or who were too confident didn't have a chance to fool themselves.

If you fail to believe you will procrastinate or become idealistic about how awesome you are at working hard and managing your time, you never develop a strategy for outmaneuvering your own weakness. Procrastination is an impulse; it's buying candy at the checkout. You must be adept at thinking about thinking to defeat yourself at procrastination. You must realize there is the you who sits there now reading this, and there is the you some time in the future who will be influenced by a different set of ideas and desires; a you for whom an alternate palette of brain functions will be available for painting reality.

Now, you may see the costs and rewards at stake when it comes time to choose studying for the test instead of going to the club, eating the salad instead of the cupcake, writing the article instead of playing the video game. The trick is to accept that the now-you will not be the person facing those choices, it will be the future - you - a person who can't be trusted. Future, you will give in, and then you'll go back to being now and feel weak and ashamed. Now, you must trick future into doing what is right for both parties. This is why food plans like Nutrisystem work for many people. Now, you commits to spend a lot of money on a giant box of food that future you will have to deal with. People who get this concept use programs like Freedom, which disables Internet access on a computer for up to eight hours, a tool allowing you now to make it impossible for future-you to sabotage your work.

Capable psychonauts who think about thinking, about states of mind, about set and setting, can get things done not because they have more willpower or drive, but because they know productivity is a game played against a childish primal human predilection for pleasure and novelty that can never be excised from the soul. Your effort is better spent outsmarting yourself than making empty promises through plugging dates into a calendar or setting deadlines for push-ups.
#procrastination #truth
  • Profile picture of the author WinmanRoss
    Banned
    Very informative post. Thank you, man!
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  • Profile picture of the author WF99
    Yes never on my mind before .. Thanks for the thread ..
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  • Profile picture of the author OmarNegron
    Interesting perspective and very informative! Procrastination is such a common challenge among us all. In the end we are the ones who can break out of that habit. Thanks for the share!

    -Will
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  • Profile picture of the author bainbridge80
    This is really something to think about, thank you.
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  • Profile picture of the author KillKenny
    This was a pretty cool post, I'm not gonna lie. Will keep in mind.
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  • Profile picture of the author speedbird
    Thanks for sharing your thoughts ' the truth about procrastination'
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  • Profile picture of the author danieluk9
    You've made a really good point and given me something new to consider, it's always good hearing a different point of view
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  • Profile picture of the author Elamros
    Thank you for sharing. Very informative. Although this post is long, it was worth reading.
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  • Profile picture of the author Shubh Ashish
    Great Information.
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    Sell Dreams, Not Products
    - Steve Jobs
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  • Profile picture of the author Simon Ashari
    Fantastic post.

    A 'thanks' goes to you.

    Tim Ferris wrote about this a few months ago. We have a limited amount of 'will' and we need to use it wisely.

    This is why you should take steps beforehand to avoid negative actions (e.g. not bringing chocolate into your house if you are on a diet). You gave the good example of shutting off your internet for a set period of time before hand.
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  • Profile picture of the author Aegir
    procrastination is useful.

    everytime you hear negative self talk when you try and do something procrastinate that self talk
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    • Profile picture of the author masterbizcoach
      Originally Posted by Aegir View Post

      procrastination is useful.

      everytime you hear negative self talk when you try and do something procrastinate that self talk
      You're right, if you have positive mindset anything can eventually positive.
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  • Profile picture of the author MalBryc
    Decent read. Thanks for sharing.
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    "Before you save the world. Save yourself first." ~ Mike Litman

    twitter.com/MalBryc - My twitter, why not @MalBryc me?
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