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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 7 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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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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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 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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vote up 13 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 30 vote down

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

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