The Causes of Procrastination

Procrastinatio+causes

Procrastination is not altogether bad. One good reason to procrastinate is that by procrastination you are assured of lots to do. If we could be happy with looking at what will not get done as tomorrow's adventure, we would not likely be concerned with either writing or reading articles on procrastination.
Procrastination is not about all the things that do not get done. We all leave many things undone, the constraints of time do not allow any other option, but we are not all procrastinators. What denotes a procrastinator is the effort put into attempting to do those things that either do not get done or get done only under the most difficult of circumstances. Procrastinators are not procrastinators because they are lazy, or slovenly nor because they are time-challenged.
Procrastinators may have difficulty meeting deadlines but it is not because they are unconcerned about them or incognizant of the chaos that results from missed schedules. Most people who do little and worry less do not fit the clinical definition of a procrastinator. Nor do the indolent see what they do as procrastination. A procrastinator in comparison knows what needs doing and understands when it has to be done and desperately would like to achieve his or her objectives. What denotes a procrastinator is the difficulty they have doing what they sincerely desire to do.
A major problem we see in a procrastinator is poor judgment regarding priorities. Dinner may need to be cooked but the procrastinator seeking to avoid the task continues to look at it as a task more appropriate for the future. In the meantime they become preoccupied with the exotic recipes and the colorful pictures in the recipe book. For most people the priority is to cook dinner. The procrastinator whose underlying objective is to avoid making dinner as long as possible, decides to make a statement and chooses dinner as the vehicle by which it will be made. Since he or she does not have the ingredients required to make the meal of their dreams, they become immobilized by indecision. They neither want to do what they dislike (scale down their objectives) nor do they have the means to do what they wish (amaze everyone with their culinary skills).
What is an ordinary task becomes an emotionally laden dilemma filled with anxiety and conflicting goals. Which in the end is their way of escaping from having to face the task of preparing a meal.
As the culinary artist struggles with this irresolvable dilemma time overcomes the threshold of the procrastinator's resistance. A disliked task is turned into desperate haste eclipsing g all possibility of the task being either pleasant or done properly. Yet if he or she had remained focused the task of cooking dinner could have been done with a minimum of fuss, as it generally is the world over.
Procrastinators get distracted because of their inadequate prioritization. They also look at the most simple of tasks such as making dinner as a huge, overwhelming job. From deciding what to cook to putting the last fork back in the cutlery drawer the procrastinator sees work as an uninterrupted flow of activity. The immensity of the task helps them justify avoiding the job until the last minute.
A more organized approach looks at complex jobs as several components each of which can be performed independent of the others.
All of these unpleasant emotions make the procrastinator dislike even thinking about what needs to be done. They are prone to forget and they are less likely than other people to plan. Today is spent catching up with yesterdays work.

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