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Target Tuesday: Beat Procrastination

Woollywotnots' Target Tuesday

Woollywotnots' Target Tuesday

Hey folks,

It is Tuesday and therefore, time for Target Tuesday. Feel free to display the blog button if you want to join in. I know quite a few of you are following along and mentioning it in your blogs, so hope you’ll start to share your targets. If you need a reminder on what Target Tuesday is all about read here.

In a nutshell, it is all about imagining yourself on a crisp December morning at the end of the year and visualising what you want things to look like or feel like. What’s bugging you right now that you’d like to change. What is the one thing you could work towards to achieve something from your bucket list

On 43 things, “Stop Procrastinating” is number two in the list of most popular goals.

Lose Weight is number 1 ( hey we’re on the case with that one, aren’t we ‘Move-It Monday’ers’)!! :-)  

So this week for Target Tuesday, I thought we’d look at procrastination!

Procrastination is the: ‘… act of needlessly delaying tasks to the point of experiencing subjective discomfort’. (Solomon and Rothblum, 1984, cited in Fritzsche et al, 2002, p503)

Procrastination, or task avoidance, is common to many people. The word has its origins in latin: pro-(forward) and crastinus (of tomorrow).

Procrastination occurs for many reasons: you may not know where to start on a task, you may not understand a task, you may dislike the task, or you may worry that you cannot complete a task successfully. Often a person’s anxiety about a task leads them to avoid it. Therefore, to accomplish more in a day, it is best to tackle the most difficult or worrisome task first. This is beneficial because it allows you to devote the time and mental energy that is necessary for a difficult or unpleasant task when you are most able to. Furthermore, by reducing the anxiety associated with this task in tackling it early, you will find that work becomes easier.

When the unpleasant task is finished, it no longer creates anxiety and worry, which can save time. So what can we do to avoid this especial and very common pitfall?

• Once you have identified a job as important on your priority list, don’t question it. Get it onto your desk or in your hand and do it! Always start with the unpleasant task first. Get it out of the way early. You can then enjoy the most interesting tasks.

• Resist trivial tasks which might be easy or even fun but which don’t need to be done.

• If you find yourself easily distracted by other people, take your phone off the hook or put a barrier up around your workspace. Restrict downtime to set breaks on your schedule. Turn your internet connection off, if you’re distracted by online surfing!

• Think about why you are finding something difficult to complete. Don’t feel bad about it, but find ways to motivate yourself.  List the reasons for delaying and the arguments against the delay. Could you, for example, work in a group instead of alone?

However, depression related procrastination is a significant condition, but can respond to medical or therapeutic intervention. This can include counselling, and this is often the best way out of this situation for sufferers.

• Consider environmental factors. Where is the best place to complete the task? Could you go to a friend’s house or a library or keep everyone out of a room, whilst you focus on completing the task?

• If you are rather impulsive and easily bored by sticking too long at one task, you might benefit from alternating between two or three tasks and spending forty minutes on each at a time or even five minutes if that works better. Make tasks look smaller by breaking them down and doing only a small part of each task

• Set yourself short term rewards for keeping to a set task. The reward system can also be made to work more effectively if others are involved in the pay-off. If you promise, for example, your partner, spouse, or friends a part or share in the reward, then this can build in the element of commitment to others. If you let yourself down, you let others down, too.

• Don’t fill every minute of your schedule with tasks – some say that no more than 50% of your time should be planned. You need to allow plenty of time for interruptions, calls, and most importantly routine breaks such as coffee or lunch, which are vital to allow you to recharge and clear your mind.

 Finally, some wise old words:

Do not put your work off till to-morrow and the day after; for a sluggish worker does not fill his barn, nor one who puts off his work: industry makes work go well, but a man who puts off work is always at handgrips with ruin. (Hesiod, circa 800 BC: in Works and Days: l:413 )

If you’d like to join in with Target Tuesday – make a blog posting on the subject each Tuesday, linking back to this post and show a link in the comments. Every Tuesday, we’ll all make a posting that focuses on us moving one step closer to our vision of what December 2009 will be like. It could be simply a thought, or something you’ve made or an action you’ve taken.

Previous Target Tuesdays:

3 Goals

Career Questions

Create a perfect CV

Be a resolute success in 7 steps

Beat Procrastination

Work life balance

How many days can you afford to live, if you lose your job

Turn your hobby into a business

Calligraphy

Finances

Explore Locally

Will Writing

Time Management

The Great Outdoors

University

 Learning to fly

Exploring outdoors

Drive a supercar

Top 100. Have you?

Explore your city

13 Responses

  1. The Internet helps me procrastinate. I’m trying to limit my time online so I can get more done, but it’s really challenging because I’m so addicted to blogs and a few websites.

    • LOL! It is addictive. There is so much good material around. I find scheduling a time slot each day is essential, otherwise hours can fly by! :-) Using social bookmarking is a good idea too and having a feedreader.

  2. [...] Beat procrastination and instead start small by setting up a free online shop and at the same time do some exploring and thinking about the future. There are loads of shops available.Click here to find where to sell handmade online. Generally there’s a small charge for  listing items. This could be the start of a whole career change!  Keep adding suitable venues to your notebook. You could start small by having a garage sale or a carboot sale. You could sell at seasonal fairs or parish church fairs. Look at for events in your local newspaper. Are you a member of a club who would like the idea of you selling your items to raise funds and you take a percentage of the takings? You could contact local suppliers and craft shops. You could research having a stall at a national craft event. Do your research and check with event organsiers the expected turnout. See what promotion is being undertaken and where. [...]

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