Procrastination: Why We Do It And How To Stop
Main Category: Psychology / PsychiatryArticle Date: 13 Jan 2009 - 6:00 PDT
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It's a new year and many of us have started thinking about various resolutions: updating that resume, cleaning out the attic, starting that exercise routine. But the sad reality is that most of us will not follow through on these commitments, not because we're insincere, but because tomorrow is always a better time to get going.
Procrastination is a curse, and a costly one. Putting things off leads not only to lost productivity but also to all sorts of hand wringing and regrets and damaged self-esteem. For all these reasons, psychologists would love to figure out what's going on in the mind that makes it so hard to actually do what we set out to do. Are we programmed for postponement and delay?
Led by Sean McCrea of the University of Konstanz in Germany, an international team of psychologists wanted to see if there might be a link between how we think of a task and our tendency to postpone it. In other words, are we more likely to see some tasks as psychologically "distant"-- and thus making us save them for later rather than tackling them now?
The psychologists handed out questionnaires to a group of students and asked them to respond by e-mail within three weeks. All the questions had to do with rather mundane tasks like opening a bank account and keeping a diary, but different students were given different instructions for answering the questions. Some thought and wrote about what each activity implied about personal traits: what kind of person has a bank account, for example. Others wrote simply about the nuts and bolts of doing each activity: speaking to a bank officer, filling out forms, making an initial deposit, and so forth. The idea was to get some students thinking abstractly and others concretely. Then the psychologists waited. And in some cases, waited and waited. They recorded all the response times to see if there was a difference between the two groups, and indeed there was a significant difference.
The findings, reported in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, were very clear. Even though all of the students were being paid upon completion, those who thought about the questions abstractly were much more likely to procrastinate--and in fact some never got around to the assignment at all. By contrast, those who were focused on the how, when and where of doing the task e-mailed their responses much sooner, suggesting that they hopped right on the assignment rather than delaying it.
The authors note that "merely thinking about the task in more concrete, specific terms makes it feel like it should be completed sooner and thus reducing procrastination." They conclude that these results have important implications for teachers and managers who may want their students and employees starting on projects sooner. In addition, these findings are also relevant for those of us resolving to have better time management skills in the New Year!
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Wray Herbert discusses this study in his blog, "We're Only Human…" (http://www.psychologicalscience.org/onlyhuman/)
Psychological Science is ranked among the top 10 general psychology journals for impact by the Institute for Scientific Information.
Article "Construal Level and Procrastination"
Source: Barbara Isanski
Association for Psychological Science
Visit our psychology / psychiatry section for the latest news on this subject.
MLA
15 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/135260.php>
APA
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/135260.php.
Please note: If no author information is provided, the source is cited instead.
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Beating Procrastination
posted by Adrian on 14 Jan 2009 at 3:46 amWhilst doing a demonstration on NLP to a small group who meet regularly, this subject came up and the reaction from the group showed the it has, on almost everyone.
Its often the mundane task that causes a problem,one of the group said " I go home every night and there is a big pile of ironing sitting there,it drives me mad and I do not want to do it"
So I asked does anybody actually enjoy ironing,luckily a lady said yes,and I asked her how do you know you are going to enjoy it?
Simple she said said "I picture it done ,neat crisp piles of carefully folded clothes,and I asked "what does that feel like"
"A warm fuzzy feeling" and this is before the ironing was started!
So I asked the procrastinator to make a picture as vivid as he could of the ironing done,so vivid that he too got a good feeling. It worked so well that he actually went home to do it,and reported back the following week that "he really enjoys the process"
If you visualize what you put off, the picture is often still and the colour dull or none at all.
Visualize the same task in bright colours and add movement to the picture, and see it completed,so vividly that you get a really good feeling to go with it.
The procrastination melts away
warmest regards
Adrian
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