If we look at our lives, one habit surfaces as the most self-defeating and counterproductive. It is the habit of procrastination. Procrastination is a major deterrent to living a full, highly effective, vibrant and successful life. It is one of the major failure anchors that keep us from achieving our goals and realizing our fondest and wildest dreams. Studies show that about 85 percent of people procrastinate and 20 percent fall under the category of chronic procrastinators, those desperately entangled in procrastinations incapacitating web.
Procrastination is allowing low-priority tasks to get in the way of high-priority ones. Instead of facing a task of great importance, you opt to do something of lower significance thats easier, more comfortable, and even frivolous. It is socializing with friends when you know that an important deadline is due, watching a movie instead of reviewing for a school exam, buying something unimportant instead of paying off a major, overdue payment. It is letting things get worse postponing a much-needed medical checkup, not confronting your mate about relationship problems, or leaving something that you have started unfinished.
1. We are lazy. "Im too lazy to even start. I want to take it easy first" or "Oh, I dont feel like doing it. I do not want to deal with it yet."
2. We are afraid. "Oh, no. Its so scary and frightening!"
3. We are not yet in the mood. "I dont feel like doing it yet. Ill just wait till Im in the right mood."
4. We hope to be better at it at some future time. "I will have to get ready for it. Let me practice first."
5. The task is unpleasant. "Oh, it is too difficult. I cant even begin to think where to start."
6. We dont realize the value of time. "Its okay. Therell be plenty of time for it in the future."
7. We hope that fate would do it for us. "The right time will come. Bahala na! (Let fate take care of it!)"
Its all right to eat, drink and celebrate; Ill just start my diet tomorrow.
My health problem isnt that bad. This pain will be gone in no time.
I am overworked. Its not fair.
Its okay. Im sure Ill have another chance to do it.
Ive got too many things to do first.
Oh, thats life. Win some, lose some.
To make things worse, we have also developed a complimentary disease called "someday-itis." We say:
Someday when I have the time, I will.
Someday when I have the money, I will.
Someday when I have the energy, I will.
Someday when the economy is better, I will?
Sure... if that someday comes. Dont bet on the sun shining tomorrow. It might rise for someone else, but not for you.
So how do you beat the "Ill do it later" blues?
1. Act on it. Just do it and finish it!
2. Set a deadline for your project. Be strict and enforce it.
3. Put yourself in the right mood. Psyche yourself up for it.
4. Do the hardest task first. Everything else will be easy after it.
5. Erase all negativity towards the task. Think of how good youll feel if you get it out of the way.
6. Delegate. Have someone do it for you! Pay him if you must.
Remember Parkinsons Law ? "Work expands so as to fill the time available for its completion." Setting a deadline for your goal puts your task on a definite time frame. This will impose a positive pressure on you to finish it on or before the due date. Delegating work and responsibility to somebody else is another vital technique that you can use to lighten your load when you have a number of projects going on.