Dealing with a delaying habit!

avatar
(Edited)

burger518.jpg

Procrastination is defined as a way to postpone or delay action until an opportunity is missed. If you could change a single habit, eliminating the delay would put you on the path to success. The tendency to delay time is devouring. Opportunity knocks on the door in a lot of ways - some as soft as a wave in the sand and others turbulent as a wave. These moments strike when you least expect them or want them. Learn to embrace change and seize opportunities. If you turn your back on him, you might lose something special. Very often you will discover wonderful lessons in the most chaotic challenges.

Procrastination is the only thing I have time for. Is this statement true for you? Do you have a bag full of excuses or promises that you will start tomorrow morning? Here are some reasons why people use it to justify the delay and how you might overcome this disability during your organization.

If you think you don't have enough time to complete a project and think you're going to find the time you need later, you're wrong. At some point, you realize that the likely moment never comes. Yes, dither. Fill your days with discomfort and miss opportunities.

The first step to avoiding delays is to take the time to plan. Remove the paper and pen and divide the oppressive stains into manageable components. Then schedule 15-minute time blocks in your daily calendar to complete each mini-step. Only the act of scheduling an appointment with yourself increases the likelihood that you will.

All major tasks or tasks can be divided into small steps. Work on a small part of the task for 15 minutes each day, make small holes in the overwhelming project until it looks like Swiss cheese, and eventually disappear completely. Managing big tasks in this way eliminates the feeling of being overwhelmed.

Small tasks can be easily placed in the background to prefer the most important things. Most of these small tasks will have to be performed at some point; it's the little irritants that constantly sting you. You don't like them, so you push them away. The tendency to postpone a small job eventually increases the stress that comes with the knowledge that you have to do it now. However, once you start, it's usually not as bad as expected.

Somewhere in your mind, you think that if you stop long enough, the task will disappear or something in the future will eliminate the need to do so. The pressure comes when you don't do the small task and now it has to be done at an awkward time, or the price is higher than if you had done it before.

The more you stop small activities, the more you'll have to worry about finding the time to do so. As long as you get results, you increase anxiety and stress. They can also become ineffective. Every time you postpone today's homework, you increase tomorrow's burden.

You know you have to do it at some point, so why to bring out the inevitable. Take action today by planning the time it takes to complete the job. One of the best things you can do for yourself is to reserve enough time to complete the little things. There's relief when the job's done. The oppressive weight rises from your shoulders. Dig right and enjoy the performance.

Perfectly trends, over-planning, excessive cleanliness, excessive knowledge are important factors of hesitation. The need for perfect labels on folders, pens, and pencils ordered into appropriate stacks, power cabinets that are the model of perfection, and uniformly aligned paper boxes, support late trends. It is exhausting to think of a project when it needs to be completed perfectly.

That's not what it's about. He sabotaged a project imposing standards that have more to do with an idea of perfection than functional efficiency. Having all the ducks in a perfect row is fine until the idea of reaching it is crippling. The goal is efficiency and efficiency, not perfection. Life is not perfect and there is no guarantee. So start the task today by planning daily blocks of time to take small steps, and a pleasant surprise is coming. The moment is based on small successes, not the perfections of life.

Posted via neoxian.city | The City of Neoxian



0
0
0.000
3 comments
avatar

Excellent post - I'm one of the world's great procrastinators. Its easy to fine a reason not to do something. Writing things down and planning out a course o action is the only way I get anything done

0
0
0.000
avatar

Most of my procrastination springs from fear of the finished thing not being good enough. The fear of not wanting to fail. It is a constant battle

0
0
0.000