- Arousal procrastinators are thrill-seekers who tackle projects at the last minute, pulling all-nighters at school and work.
- Avoidance procrastinators habitually put off hard or boring tasks
- Decisional procrastinators are paralyzed by indecisiveness.
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How to stop putting things off
Here are seven tips Geralin Thomas of Metropolitan Organizing in Cary shares with clients battling procrastination.
1. Request assistance!
Call a friend, family member or professional organizer if you can't manage a project alone.
2. Cut projects into bite-sized pieces.
Rather than think, "OMG, how am I going to become America's next Top Chef? You break the goal into a cascading series of "to-dos."
3. Reward yourself for small victories.
It could be something simple like giving yourself permission to go to bed 15 minutes earlier (mom with small children at home) or treating yourself to a carwash, reading an extra chapter in a book, etc. once you have achieved a "mini-goal." (You scanned and filed one of four shoe boxes full of receipts.)
4. Identify what your goals are and what is keeping you from them.
Example: I want to lose 100 pounds but:
I eat when I'm anxious, bored, happy, late at night, etc.
I love eating junk food high in fat/sugar.
I don't have time to exercise.
I hate sweating.
5. Be purposeful; go for excellence, not perfectionism.
Good enough is just that; think in terms of pass/fail rather than having to wait for the perfect time to: get married, clean your garage, organize your files, entertain guests at your home, etc.
6. Be prepared to succeed!
Fail to plan = plan to fail. Set yourself up for success!
Back up your computer, charge your mobile phone every evening.
Keep cash/batteries/canned food/extra medications on hand during hurricane season.
Set up your coffee maker the night before work -- wake up to the smell.
For kids: medications/vitamins/permission slips/keys/glasses/lunches/school supplies in order before going to bed.
7. Visualize time.
A day is like a container with finite compartments (24 hours/24 compartments)
Sleep = 6 hours
Work = 8 hours
E-mail = 2 hours, etc.
Each day only holds a certain number of activities and events. Take control of your life by setting priorities, deciding how you really want to spend that time.
To learn More
Find out if you are a procratinator by taking a short quiz at:
http://all.successcenter.ohio-state.edu/quizzes.asp
Keep up with the latest research at:
http://http-server.carleton.ca/~tpychyl/
Read Dr. Timothy A. Pychyl's take on "the anguish of procrastination," "Facebook -- a whole new world of wasting time" and aspects of the issue at his Psychology Today blog:
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