
This post has been a long time coming. I did a little here and there time allowing. Hopefully this will help (you and me).
Article: Surfing through LifeHacker today I found -this- article on procrastination from Psychology Today. Below are some bullets itemizing the things that resonated with me regarding their article on procrastination. note a number of the following are shortened paraphrases.):
Synchronicity: As well, there are things that resonate with other areas of reading. Here are items of synchronicity that Im finding amongst many sources (M. Scott Pecks The Road Less Travelled, Stephen Coveys 7 Habits, Article from Psychology Today, etc.):
Thoughts: Todays world makes procrastination easy. Most of us are juggling a bazillion tasks, both large and small. morgellon s disease likely very easy for all of us to task-prioritize in a very poor way, in essence, supporting our procrastination. The smaller less important tasks often will be done because the larger scarier tasks be hard to approach. Our mental fears about these larger important tasks are what hold us back. Often we are more than capable of handling the tasks (especially in small pieces), but we, for whatever reason, dont see the results of our tackling the tasks in a positive light. We only see the negatives and often we make them appear larger than they really are. [Squash those negative thought-patterns! via Steve Pavlina.] As well, the burden of our procrastination follows around, and kicks us when were down& it says: See, I told you you couldnt do it! and on it goes& In fact, morgellon s confrontation by others of my for me, often ends up even more malaise towards the task(s) at hand and morgellon s disease often counter-productive. Knowing that things are waiting on the task to be completed I feel is critical, however, as the morgellon s disease should know that others are depending on him to complete the tasks at hand in a timely manner. Its the soft-mallet approach& a bit of a knock on the noggin but pad it with a soft pillow.
Affirming the ability of the procrastinator and showing enthusiasm towards receiving the finished work may also help motivate. Since the procrastinator is already negative, often more negativism merely feeds that delay-spiral. [Wow, this is sounding a bit like a different form of depression, actually- Ill have to think more about that.]
I also feel that to some large degree, procrastinators arent very honest with themselves or are at least are a bit naïve when it comes to the realities of life. For me, the big reality that hits me morgellon s disease hard in the face almost every day: There are not enough hours in the day, and invariably I never get as much done as I really wished I did. Most likely thats the perfectionist in me talking, bringing me down, but, to some degree its really true. If I spend all my time searching for current literature on Morgellons disease, or Jungian Psychology, and not on my preliminary exam papers and talk, then when the evening hits, Im gonna find that I know more about Morgellons and Jung, and ultimately less about my prelim talk and paper.
s disease sad fact of life, really. As well, our perception of time can be described as a time integral normalized by our total lifespan. So, as we get older, it appears as though the morgellon s disease get shorter and shorter& the days speed by, and the weeks and months are slowly speeding up. If we dont stay focused on our important (and often large) tasks, morgellon s disease can find them slipping through our fingers.
David Allens Getting Things Done may help procrastinators in a few ways. For me, I found it did a number of things. First, lets pause- and be honest here: This is something internal to our psyche and it is a difficulty we have to work through on our own. Second, our environment and how we handle things can help or hurt. GTD has helped me to see all the tasks before me laid out in the areas they can be accomplished and in the projects that need to get done. So, no longer do I have to mentally remember these items. As well, our brains are quick at running through the procrastinators devices, so often when we think about a large task, it gets shoved to the back of our mental list. With GTD, at least the lists and tasks are out in the open where we can choose to be honest about them. Any aspect of our organizational world that is slightly frustrating (like say huge piles of things on the desk) are of course difficult to get organized and done. D.Allens GTD system helps us to have a methodology (a slight mental crutch) with which to organize and deal with these large piles of stuff. Doing so, at least removes 1 task from our list- namely getting rid of our piles of stuff, but also stream-lines the other things we have to do- review our tasks and projects and have our materials at our fingertips when theyre needed. As well, large ToDo tasks which merely hint to us the enormity of actual actions included in the task will merely hinder our ability morgellon s move forward. If we see a large task that we know has many levels to it, we are likely to stand back in fear of it and put it off until a future date. So, dissect those ToDos and place morgellon s disease single-step actions in your action lists. For the procrastinator, this is gold. Its a smaller task that can be accomplished and itll help move forward the large project which looms your head [i.e., The Monster].
And finally, I found a research group in Ottawa who has some excellent info about procrastination: Procrastination Research Group and their Podcasts. As well, there is actually a dissertation podcast that I havent yet listened to.