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I have had horrible procrastination habits since gradeschool, and now that I'm in college, I still am having a hard time beating this bad habit. I find myself easily distracted from doing real "work" and find myself wandering off doing something else that I enjoy more.

Tell me how you personally beat procrastination; or share your struggles.

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37 Answers

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vote up 32 vote down

Break your large tasks down into smaller tasks.
The following three small items are mentally easier to get started on than Organise Birthday Party:

  • Phone Dave's parents to get contact list for family members.
  • Ring Dave's family to invite them.
  • Phone Cakes R Us to order cake.

If you sit down for five minutes and think about what your tasks boil down to it's easier to get them done. Make sure you write a list of things that can be done, not that involve more thinking. For example, you're more likely to procrastinate over Buy Cake, than "Visit Billy's Cakes and choose a cake", or "Check out cake shops on the internet".

You should definitely check out Getting Things Done by David Allen, I used to procrastinate constantly, and while it still rears its ugly head, I'm much better at cracking on these days.

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I should really read that Getting Things Done book.... later. – Dan Olson Apr 20 at 20:01
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vote up 30 vote down

Block *.stackoverflow.com with your favourite Web Content Blocking software?

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vote up 16 vote down

I find what works best for me is to pick the smallest task from my list of things to do, complete that, then move to the next smallest and so on until I've got enough momentum to pick up something more complex.

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vote up 12 vote down

Procrastination is often a symptom of a fear of failure. As long as you're not finished, you haven't done a bad job.

You mention you're a student... stop by your student counseling center, they are sure to have some resources that can help you.

Good luck!

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vote up 6 vote down

If 'real' work isn't interesting find more interesting 'real' work. Not appropriate for everyone but the only way I can survive in this messed up world.

PS. Sense of Humour failure on Stack Overflow? Why was this answer modded down? It was both truthful and funny while it shouldn't float to the top of the pile to hide more appropriate answers unless we want this community to turn into a bunch of robots giving boring dry answers to boring dry technical questions stop down modding people with a personality.

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vote up 5 vote down

Try to find something you like in the work you do, and focus on that. I don't think I would be able to study Computer Science if I didn't love it (or at least parts of it :) )

Having a close friend, who knows you and knows when they should take you out for a drink or two and when they should give you a kick in the butt and remind you that you have that deadline coming up, helps a lot.

Also, don't worry about failing. Everyone fails at something, and you shouldn't be discouraged if you don't get a pass. Just pull up your socks and plough on.

Forgot to mention - make yourself little aims instead of bigger and more global ones, the feeling that you keep achieving something often, should keep you more productive.

Hope this helps.

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I'll get round to posting it later.

Okay, in all seriousness I find that some exercise combined with going to bed early and getting up early over going to bed late and getting up late works.

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I try to work with a partner, or tell someone else about my task so that they can ask me later if I got it done. The first method keeps me engaged and working on things because my partner expects me to get things done. The second method provides guilt as punishment for procrastination.

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vote up 4 vote down

I switch off the internet.

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vote up 3 vote down

Don't read anything that has GTD in the title - ironically reading about getting things done means that you are not doing the things. I'm yet to meet a GTD fanatic who's actually capable of geeing tees deed.

Also, I hope you realize that you are procrastinating right now.

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vote up 3 vote down

I haven't been in school for quite some time, so the only procrastination type experience i have right now has to do with real-world job-like procrastination, and I've found defeating it pretty easy in my current environment.

i) Make a list of all the items you need to complete. Typically, at the start of an iteration, I have about 20 of these tasks.

ii) Calculate how many days you have between now and your deadline.

iii) calculate how much work you have to do everyday to complete all your items in time to meet the deadline.

I know it sounds trivial, but man, there aren't a whole lotta things that keep me more motivated than seeing that I have to put in an ever-increasing amount of effort on a daily basis if I continue to beat the dog in order to make my deadline. It's simple, and it scares the piss outta me.

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Getting Things Done is fantastic overall, but for getting started I'd recommend a very short book called Eat That Frog! by Brian Tracy (also available as an audiobook on audible.com).

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You should definitely check out Getting Things Done by David Allen, I used to procrastinate constantly, and while it still rears its ugly head, I'm much better at cracking on these days.

You can listen to David Allen himself talk about procrastination in this 43 folders podcast.

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vote up 2 vote down

I ask my self why am I putting this off, it is usually is a question. Then address that reason. It requires discipline, but it is one of the few proven ways to fight procrastination.

The symptoms tend to be bored, tired, want to do something else, etc. We do plenty of things that we don't want to when we are bored, tired, hungry, etc when it suits us. Pay attention to what is making you procrastinate.

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vote up 2 vote down

If you manage to get motivated the procrastination shouldn't be a problem anymore. There are some motivational short video clips out there which could help (works for me), i.e. No Excuses I really like that one. Good luck.

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You could take a look at lifehacker. They use quite some time on Getting Things Done and the like. See this for example: http://lifehacker.com/search/procrastination/

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I just recently listened to the audio version of The Now Habit by Dr. Neil Fiore. I haven't put its recommendations to work yet, but I am convinced that there are some really good ideas in there for changing your attitude toward work and play.

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awesome irony :) – Ben Throop Nov 14 '08 at 15:45
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This is how i stay in line.

  1. Go to an Art Supply store and buy a really nice hard cover sketch pad.
  2. Every Morning make a chart of what you want to accomplish that day.
  3. Carry it with you at all times and mark off what you get done. It also useful to write down ideas.

I learned this from a Ben Franklin biography. He had a book with Ivory pages so he could wipe them clean and reuse them. It is important to get a nice pad and not just a notebook because it will encourage you to stick with it.

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vote up 1 vote down

Here's a second vote for The Now Habit. It gets to the root of your issues - as opposed to just giving "tricks and tips" advice.

I found temporary procrastination relief after reading it - but the fact that I'm here answering your question shows that I'm due for a re-read!

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vote up 1 vote down

Last semester I took some blank pages, markers, and made a giant to-do list which I attached to my wall so I could take the pages off once I finished one of the points. It looked horrible, and my OCD made me want to take them off as soon as possible.

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vote up 1 vote down

I don't beat it. It is my always present companion and master.

But seriously, my variety of procrastination always stems from a lack of energy, caused by a massive lack of sleep. I have always had a problem with the amount of sleep I get, and every time I make it up I always get vastly more done. Getting more sleep and consuming unhealthy amounts of caffeine always help.

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vote up 1 vote down

The DIFN strategy works wonders for me.

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This may sound like heresy to some of you but try this as an experiment. It worked for me.

Go without any caffeine and get a rock solid 8 hours of sleep each night for 2-3 days and then gauge how well you can focus. Report back! I used to consume 3-5 large (32-oz) sweet teas a day. Not only is that a ton of caffeine, it's a metric ton of sugar. I've cut down to 16-32 oz of tea at most per day and I never drink caffeine after 4pm. I make decaf tea at home and cut the sugar half with splenda. I'm sleeping more deeply and I'm getting more done at work.

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You say you've had this problem since grade school - it sounds like you know that this is about you, not about the work. So I disagree with those who think the problem is that you've got boring classes.

Getting Things Done and The Now Habit are both excellent approaches, but very different. GTD is about tactics - how to set up your to-do list properly, what kind of routines to establish to trick yourself into being efficient. The Now Habit is about discovering what makes you procrastinate.

Do you dread doing things you think you should? Try The Now Habit.

Are you disorganized? Try GTD.

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Thanks to a previous answer, I just read Procrastination: Ten Things To Know and found it valuable. I particularly liked this part:

There's more than one flavor of procrastination. People procrastinate for different reasons. Dr. Ferrari identifies three basic types of procrastinators:

  • arousal types, or thrill-seekers, who wait to the last minute for the euphoric rush.
  • avoiders, who may be avoiding fear of failure or even fear of success, but in either case are very concerned with what others think of them; they would rather have others think they lack effort than ability.
  • decisional procrastinators, who cannot make a decision. Not making a decision absolves procrastinators of responsibility for the outcome of events.
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vote up 0 vote down

Stopped reading tech news sites (techcrunch, slashdot, etc). If something really big comes out, don't worry, you'll know about it anyway.

Got rid of all the feeds in my RSS reader of which I wouldn't even read half of the entries. That divided the information load I was getting from there daily by about 20-fold.

Used TimeRescue to track my own progress through the procrastination battle.

Read "the 4 hour workweek".

Constantly kept an empty inbox in gmail.

Created dozens of rules in gmail to delete all these newsletters that are impossible to unsubscribe from, making the mail notifier in my tray meaningful. These days I get about 2 emails a day in my inbox (sometimes even none and that feels pretty good) so it's OK to pause what I'm doing to reply immediately (which I don't do for the personal emails anyway). Before the big cleanup I used to get 12-15 a day.

Overall if you do all of that you end up freeing a lot of your time. With a lot more free time than you can handle and no dependency on your old procrastination toys anymore, you'll get bored and you'll end up doing whatever you've been putting off for so long. but that's just the way I am, these hints are to be adapted to your own personality and habits.

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vote up 0 vote down

See this previous question: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/25397/efficient-workday

As the asker of that question, I bought Getting Things Done, which I'm getting through at the moment. So far, while it is a decent read, it is not geared toward people writing software and I get the impression that he anticipates his audience as high ranking business people (there is the odd "Get your assistant to file things away for you" piece of advice). But there looks to be enough in it to apply it to generally improving productivity, albeit with a bit of adaptation to the tech industry.

In general though, as a part time procrastinator, I find that the more planning I do, the more efficiently I tend to get the actual work done. Before I do anything, I try to spend time figuring out exactly what is required and split up any large tasks into small chunks.

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vote up 0 vote down

I find a small bug to fix that is very simple. Before I know it I am fixing other bugs since I have the code open. I also like to tell someone in my team what I am working on that way I have an obligation to finish it.

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vote up 0 vote down

Well, seeing as you are in college... you aren't really doing real "work". You are doing schoolwork. The best way to prevent procrastination in your case would be to:

  1. Consider the consequences of failure
  2. Work at McDonald's or another fast food restaurant to reinforce point 1

For people in the real world, it's usually quite simple. Do your work on time or get fired.

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vote up 0 vote down

One thing that works for me is to schedule it.

For instanced, I don't procastinate on exercise because I'm taking a class and it has specific hours. I show up for class, exercise and it's done.

If I have a particular task that's important, it will get done if I put it on the calendar, then devote the time to it when it comes up.

And when the time is up, I can get back to procrastinating.

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