Drowning in email? Try Inbox Zero to learn sane tips for dealing with high-volume email. And don’t miss the free Inbox Zero video. »
Register for free on 43 Folders to comment on articles, post to our forum, customize your visits, and much more. Current users can login now.
Solid tactics for understanding (and beating) procrastination
Merlin Mann | Jun 20 2005
Overcoming Procrastination Through the Pull Method Excellent, Neil Fiore-esque advice on unpacking why you’re procrastinating and rewiring the crummy thinking that supports it.
POSTED IN:
|
|
| EXPLORE 43Folders | THE GOOD STUFF |
Oh god, oh god. That...
Oh god, oh god. That font. I was so excited—I clicked on the link, and then my eyeballs split. Arial Narrow. Boy, that’s bad.
So WHAT the heck is...
So WHAT the heck is the “board walking metaphor”?
http://departments.bloomu.edu/english/111.procrast.htm I quickly
http://departments.bloomu.edu/english/111.procrast.htm I quickly skimmed the above referenced page. It looks like almost the exact same content, plus some. A tad easier on the eyes.
The board walking metaphor appears to be a reference to Fiore’s work: http://hashref.com/reading/summaries/TheNowHabit.pdf
Brendon, thanks so much for...
Brendon, thanks so much for the link to the summary. It surely can’t be fair use - but it’s wonderful.
I am a BIG procrastinator,...
I am a BIG procrastinator, and I don’t think that it helps at all becuse then there are a ton of further things sitting on your head, causing more fear and the like.
I have, however, come up with a strategy that works (when I choose to implement it). People swear by lists. Now so do I, but those are usually packing lists so that when I am packing at the absolute last minute, there is some semblance of order and the important things don’t let left behind.
“To do” lists, on the other hand, don’t work for me, at least not the conventional kind. My strategy is to write a “To do” list on an index card (yes, I’ve been using them for years, before this index card PDA craze started), but leave the list blank. At the end of the day, I write down whatever I have done that day that has some sort of importance at all, whether it is work related or not, such as: went to the gym, did laundry, started article, etc. I can also then check them off at the end of the day because they are already done (!). I know this sounds silly, but feeling that you have accomplished SOMETHING in a day makes it easier to accomplish more the next day. And then you don’t feel so bad about giving yourself rewards.
A weird way I have...
A weird way I have helped some of my procrastination is to turn everything off and NOT do anything for a timed 10 minutes. No books, magazines. TV, radio, computers, no index cards.
After about 7 minutes I feel like I have to do something or explode. The feeling of time slipping away gets to be unbearable.
That does get me back on track if I notice myself doing dumb things like surfing slashdot or 43folders:) when I should be doing work.
Down with procrastination 43 Folders is...
Down with procrastination
43 Folders is probably in my top five most useful sites. Almost every post seems to be written specifically for me. Take, for example, today’s post pointing to this excellent article. For a few weeks, I’ve fallen back into not doing things …
Bloody procrastinator Do you procrastinate? I...
Bloody procrastinator
Do you procrastinate? I think we all do, one time or another. There are just so many things to do that are better than the one at hand. But, actually, procrastination is just a strategy of your mind to avoid…
an unlikely confesssion: where...
an unlikely confesssion: where to start?
i am obsessed with finishing things. of course, you would never know this by the state of my house, my life, my hair, but it’s true. and i am so obsessed with the thought of being able to finish that…
procrastination and wabi-sabi Procrastination - we...
procrastination and wabi-sabi
Procrastination - we all do it. Some of us even know we’re doing it, and know we shouldn’t, and yet we go on doing it regardless. Consciously, almost. In Solid tactics for…
I (heart) Merlin and other...
I (heart) Merlin and other nerds
43 Folders findssolid tactics for understanding (and beating) procrastination in a technique called the pull method. The blurb Merlin offers jives (and I do mean jive, as in grooves with, not jibe, which might mean something similar, but when I…
I (heart) Merlin and other...
I (heart) Merlin and other nerds
43 Folders finds solid tactics for understanding (and beating) procrastination in a technique called the pull method. The blurb Merlin offers jives (and I do mean jive, as in grooves with, not jibe, which might mean something similar, but when…