annesarticles.com annesarticles.com
Search:    Index -> About Us -> Privacy -> ToS -> Add Your Link -> Add Your Article   
 
 

Motivation: Tearing Down Your Own Limitations

A limit is a physical restriction, an unchangeable part of life. A limitation is a psychological res ... - Jeff Herring
 

In The Driver's Seat

Envision yourself in the driver's seat of your car. Where are you headed? What path are you taking? ... - Eva Gregory
 

Waiting for that Perfect Moment

In the secular world we are content to act on possibilties, so why not in the world of religion and ... - Patricia Nordman
 
 

How I Wish I Was Rich!

All of us have so many wishes throughout our lives, and we always complain about not getting our wis ... - Doreen Cohanim
 

Provoking My Productivity Potential

10 tips to manage your time for improved productivity.Includes exercise, fitness, stress relief and ... - John B. Perry
 
 

  Index » Self Enhancement » Time Scheduling
   
 

Procrastination: Why We Do It and How to Change

   

PROCRASTINATION: Youve known about it since high school or college, when everybody boasted about it. Everyone put off papers for a basketball game or a night on the town. It was OKyou only go through college once, right? You left college, but did you leave procrastination? You are now accountable for procedures and personnel responsibilities more complicated and more consequential than any you shouldered in college. Have your habits and attitudes evolved to handle them?

TACKLING PROCRASTINATION: 1) Recognition. Be aware of the costs of procrastination and the benefits of reform. 2) Insight. Discover procrastination patterns in our work. 3) Enlightenment. Learn the ways other people have successfully changed their habits. 4) Action. Begin to use those methods to change our own habits.

THE COST OF PROCRASTINATION: Procrastination is a choice. Faced with some distasteful obligation, large or small, professional or personal, we choose to do anything but carry it out. At first, its deadline is comfortably distant. There is no need to act because we have so much time. After some time passes, we realize that we are letting valuable moments slip by. Yet we dread the task, disparage the goal, and continue to opt for more pleasing work. By this time, however, we cannot ignore the impending moment of accountability. We begin to think That Job is more difficult and more momentous than anyone realizes. We begin to make excuses to ourselves or others, knowing well are only trying to gloss over a worsening situation. Eventually, we begin to lose confidence in our ability to make decisions, control our performance at work, and even lead worthwhile lives.

REASONS: FEARS AND FEELINGS BEHIND PROCRASTINATION: If the risks of procrastination are so high and the results so grim, why do we do it in the first place? Often because, as we anticipate meeting a particular obligation, we are struck by fear and its corollaries: 1) Performance anxiety: fear of doing a poor job. 2) Dreading the outcome: fear of what will follow. 3) Disliking the task: fear of specific steps. 4) Boredom: fear of monotony. You can start to control your time by controlling these fears. Face them honestly, define them. ask yourself whether they are rationalare they directly related to the obligation at hand, or are they rooted in anxieties about other aspects of your life? Once you have reflected on them, focus on changing the circumstances that give rise to them. Take steps to overcome your fears and work towards your real objectives instead.

Author: Andrew E. Schwartz
 
Author Bio:
Andrew E. Schwartz is a noted author. Andrew likes to create articles about this area.
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Personal Change: Self Help/Self Improvement Is Alchemy
 
Is Your Past Weighing You Down?
 
Motivation By Facing Facts
 
Five Quick Tips For Stress Management
 
So You're Old? So What!
 
How To Actualize Your Potential
 
Quiz - Can Money Buy Happiness?
 
Closing My Eyes, Opening My Heart
 
12 Reflections on Personal Responsibility
 
Releasing the Illusion of Control
 
 
 

 

Self Enhancement

 

Medicine & Treatment

 

Academics & Learning

 

Society & Communities

 

Home Family & Garden

 

Malls & Shopping

 

Careers & Employment

 

Travel & Vacation

 

Research & Science

 

Sports & Adventure

 

Lifestyle & Fashion

 

Art & Culture

 

Hygiene & Health

 

Eating & Drinking

 

Teens & Kids

 

Recreation

 

Banking & Finance

 

Automobiles

 

Events & News

 

Companies & Business

 

Politics & Government

 

Property & Agents

 

Computers & Networking

 

Online & Indoor Games

 
   Index -> Privacy -> ToS
Copyright © 2008 www.annesarticles.com All Rights Reserved.