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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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The single best advice for beating procrastination I've ever seen (Thank you Joel!): Fire and Motion.

On a more personal and less professional note: when I procrastinate, it's because I don't want to do something. Teasing at the "why" of why you don't want to do it might not help you get it done, but will teach you about yourself and your desires.

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I second John Lubotsky's answer.

In addition, procrastination can be a powerful productivity tool. There's no nice way to say this, but many tasks assigned by managers are a waste of time. Maybe a more positive way to say this is that often a manager asks for what they think they want rather than what they actually need. Procrastination can sometimes clarify the difference.

Another situation is when you are confronted with a huge, difficult, nearly-impossible task. The temptation is to buckle down and get it done. Anything less is viewed as procrastination. But surprisingly often, if you take a few days to think about the root problem, you can find a workaround or alternate path that reduces the size of the task. Often getting down to work makes it impossible to see the shortcut.

Occasionally, tasks become overtaken by events without any harm being done. Maybe a feature needs to be added to solve a user's problem, but another feature will also solve the problem. If you do the second feature first, you avoid implementing the first feature.

Most of us live and work in task-oriented societies that value getting things done. Getting labeled a "procrastinator" can be fatal to your career if you aren't careful. But most of us realize deep down that getting things done isn't always the most important thing. Procrastination in some ways is just a negative synonym for prioritization.

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Watch the lecture given by Randy Pausch about time management on YouTube:

Randy Pausch on Time Management

Professor Pausch gave this lecture before dying of cancer a few months ago when he knew he was sick and had few time left.

If you are to hear someone talk about using your time wisely, I think this is one of the most inspirational talks you can find.

As much as I hate spoilers, if you don't want to watch the whole video, the main point he makes is:

  • Classify your tasks in important and not important. Do the important stuff first. As for the not important: just don't do it at all.

I think we all procrastinate in things that are not so important to us, because they are not interesting, or not fun, or not critical. You just have to realize that you are the one that has to decide if those things are really not that important. If it is not important to you, then make your mind, fix your life, and don't waste time thinking about having to do it at all.

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I was going to ask a question almost exactly like this one. I know it's an important one for me, because I had a horrible feeling in my stomach when writing the subject line and I had to force myself. So, the answers to this question so far have been great for me, and thanks for asking it.

The funny thing is, that I really love it when I am productive. Nevertheless, it seems to be a fear of failure that causes me to dance away from getting started.

Today, in contrast to others, I've had an extremely productive day. Here's what I did:

Yesterday afternoon, I wrote in my daily journal what to do as soon as I arrived at work. I wrote these imperative commands to myself, plus some telling questions:

. Avoid procrastination
. Can my project be installed onsite today?
. Work on project 'b' if you're stuck, it's meaty *and* interesting
. what can you think of to do, to improve the company's projects and income?
. what projects can progress?
. what new qualifications can I attain over the Christmas period?
. Who could I speak to that I've been neglecting?
. Don't do any web browsing at all, except for work questions and google talks, until at least 4:30
. don't question yourself
. be proud of yourself, there's a lot of good there
. you may not be perfect in all areas, but you're working it through

So, when I came in this morning, I got stuck into it. The directives above stopped me from diverting off onto web browsing when I was beginning to get stuck.

I redefined the architecture for a current project, and broke it down into small tasks, and prototyped experiments to make each little bit work. Then I wrote out in a text file how to bring all the experimental prototypes together into a neat combination of code.

I think the secret is to start the day well, and then the flow starts early. In order to start the day well, I find it useful to pre-frame my tasks and attitudes the afternoon before.

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Try using a new time management system called AutoFocus.

It's free and works like nothing I've ever tried before...and I've pretty much tried them all up to now.

http://www.markforster.net/autofocus-system/

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Two very worthwhile resources:

Procrastination by Stefan Molyneux

The Little Guide to Beating Procrastination, Perfection and Blocks by Hillary Rettig

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I am an expert procrastinator and I've been looking at the pomodoro technique recently.

Basically its splitting your tie up into 25min intervals and lost of 5mins in between to do whatever else.

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