A lot has been said about procrastination. Different
time management coaches have dived much into this topic and every finding has
been much a surprise than what has been assumed for long. For decades and millenniums,
the habit of procrastination has been thought to be a negative behavior. In fact,
linguists made an effort to generate a proverb; ‘Procrastination is the thief
of time.’ Now, that is linguistical view of procrastination, what about
yourself? Do you too view procrastination as a thief of time? Do you view
procrastination as negative energy? When you keep on saying I will register for
a course and you don’t, or you say I am going to drop a message to her and you don’t,
how do you feel about it? What about if you keep on delaying a certain revenge?
Shall that be still procrastination?
The truth is that there is nothing wrong about
procrastination once it’s used wisely. Procrastination is a tool and you are
the farmer. The farmer directs how the jembe should work. The panga cannot work
without receiving commands, neither can a wheel barrow move on its own even on
a sloppy area. The human being rides the motorcycle and not vice versa. This is
how you should be viewing procrastination. You solely choose what to do and not
to do. In other words, you have the full control and powers over what to
procrastinate and not to. Your choice matters. If you choose chitchatting on Facebook
or WhatsApp while you have loads of office tasks to attend to, that is purely
your choice. You are basically procrastinating on something important over something
you can totally eliminate without any adverse effects on your career. Shall it
not be beautiful, if you do the reverse?
Basically, there are two kinds of procrastination as
speaker, Mel Robbins puts it in his book, ‘The 5 Second Rule.’
‘I
was also surprised to learn there are two kinds of procrastination: destructive
procrastination, which is when you avoid tasks you need to complete, and productive
procrastination, which is an important part of any creative process.’
Mel Robins.
Let’s straight away begin with
productive procrastination. It is called constructive procrastination. When you
have a very good project which you are working on, and you give yourself a
break of let’s say, 2-3 days, do not be burned out, what you may unconsciously be
practicing is productive procrastination. The break you are giving yourself
helps in rejuvenating your energy and you may find yourself bouncing back with
fresh ideas over something that had really eaten up your time. Another example
is a recurring procrastination about revenging a certain act that was done to
you 2 years back. There is absolutely nothing wrong with this.
On the other hand, destructive procrastination, lies
in the failure to do what you should do while knowing very well about the
negative consequences tied to that single behaviour. It is the most common type
that most people practice. This type of procrastination is poison to your productivity.
It is the main reason why you have not done what you said you wanted to do 3
years down the line. When you choose to chat to a colleague at work when dozens
of reports are waiting for you on your desk, that is injustice to you career.
Remember the law of excluded alternative, ‘choosing to do one thing means not
doing another.’ Later you’ll start complaining about time not being enough to
do all that stuff you were supposed to, during the day. Mel Robbins will always
tell you, ‘you will either find a way or find an excuse.’
On the next blog, we shall be looking at reason for
procrastination ways of dealing with it once and for all.
© Time Coach
lokalyzetu.blogspot.com
ReplyDeletegroundwatermanic.blogspot.com
Good one.
ReplyDeletehttps://groundwatermanic.blogspot.com/?m=1
procastination, the thief of time...Thanks
ReplyDeleteGood one indeed
ReplyDeleteThank you Sam
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