Procrastination is a thief. It robs you of the one commodity you just can’t buy back: time. It throws off schedules. It replaces accomplishment with inaction. It turns dreams into nightmares.
When faced with a task you just don’t want to do, many of us simply put it off until tomorrow. That’s why tomorrow is often the busiest day of the week. And one of these days becomes none of these days.
Putting off an unpleasant task until tomorrow simply gives you more time for your imagination to make a mountain out of a possible molehill ... more time for anxiety to sap your self-confidence.
Most of us can relate to occasional bouts of procrastination – the phone call you have been dreading to place, the project you just can’t get excited about, the meeting you should have scheduled two weeks ago. But why can’t we just get in gear?
Thomas A. Harris, in his famous book “I’m OK, You’re OK,” wrote there are three things that give people the “wantivation” to change: They must hurt sufficiently, they must experience despair or boredom, or they must suddenly discover they can change.
Dr. Gail Saltz, author of “Becoming Real: Defeating the Stories We Tell Ourselves That Hold Us Back,” says 20 percent of Americans are considered “chronic procrastinators.” But it’s not about laziness, it’s about fear, she says. Among the reasons:
• Fear of failure. Are you so paralyzed by the fear of failure that you’d rather just not try at all?
• Fear of success. Do you think if you succeed at something, then the bar will be set so high you will never reach it again? Or are you afraid you don’t deserve success?
• A need to be defiant. Is life generally a battle for control? Are you taking a passive-aggressive approach to control by procrastinating?
• A thrill-seeker procrastinator. Are you trying to avoid the boredom of daily tasks? Does boredom terrify you? Do you need to create a crisis to keep things interesting?
Understanding procrastination will help you break the paralyzing habit of putting off what you need to do. Then you can begin to make the changes that will help you tackle your work with more determination.
Start prioritizing so you won’t get overwhelmed. Create to-do lists and figure out what’s important. As the old saying goes, “Well begun is half done.” Knowing what you need to do is not enough. You need to plan to track your progress.
Then do just one step. Gather some preliminary information, call one person or figure out what tools you need. Once you’ve completed that task, give yourself permission to do something else. In many cases, once you’ve begun, you’ll be more inclined to keep on working. Even if you aren’t, you’ll be one step closer to success when you come back to the task later.
I find it helpful to set a deadline, even when the project isn’t time-sensitive. That way, there’s nothing hanging over my head that is cluttering up the rest of my workload. I also write down my to-do list so I can focus on one item at a time.
Procrastination is a problem at all levels. Charles M. Schwab, who founded Bethlehem Steel Co. in 1904, was a master of his schedule. He made it a practice of investing five minutes each day analyzing the problems he should tackle the next day. He would write down those tasks in the order of priority.
When he arrived at his office the next morning, he would start with the top issue on his list and move on in order. “This is the most practical lesson I’ve ever learned,” he claimed, and shared this example to prove his point: “I had put off a phone call for nine months, so I decided to list it as my No. 1 task on my next day’s agenda. That call netted a $2 million order.”
Mackay’s Moral: Overcoming procrastination helps your to-do list become your all-done list.
Harvey Mackay is the author of the New York Times best-seller “Swim With the Sharks Without Being Eaten Alive.” He can be reached through his website, www.harveymackay.com.