Apparently — and we’ll talk some other time about why you need other people to take care of your customer support email — I missed Anti-Procrastination Day.
Apparently, as an expert on the topic who has written an entire book on Dissolving Procrastination, I could have taken the opportunity to say something smart and anti-procrastination-ish on such an important day.
On the other hand, I tend to think that the existence of an Anti-Procrastination Day is just about the wrongest thing I’ve ever heard of.
Also, please don’t be distressed if you’ve never heard of National Anti-Procrastination Day. There are a lot of totally made-up days out there to miss.
For example, you just missed National Miniature Golf Day too. And even I can’t remember exactly when the International Day of Borekas and Repression is supposed to roll around again.
And to make matters worse, no one seems to be able to agree on when exactly National Anti-Procrastination Day was. September 6th? September 29th?
I looked it up and apparently it’s both.
Nice job, anti-procrastination people. Way to remind people they didn’t get anything done on the first one, by having the second one a couple weeks later.
Bam! Right in the guilt!
Okay, so at this point you might have guessed that I’m not really a fan of Anti-Procrastination Day. Let’s talk about that.
Problem #1: There is no battle.
What do you think is a bigger time suck? Procrastinating or fighting procrastination?
Because fighting procrastination is just about the stupidest, most ineffective time waster of all.
Don’t get me wrong. The desire to beat the habit to a pulp is natural and normal. It makes sense that we want to do it. It’s just not useful.
“Oh, no! It’s going to win! I need to step up the fight! Maybe if I just kick myself harder I’ll finally do the thing!”
It doesn’t work like that, guys.
It doesn’t work like that because procrastination is not the enemy. Procrastination is a sign that some emotions related to the thing you’re not doing are coming up for you, and that they need some attention.
The process of ignoring and repressing those emotional experiences (and/or filtering those emotional experiences through a mass of guilt and shoulds) is what we call procrastination.
Otherwise it’s just Being in a State of Not Doing, which is fine.
Or it’s Percolating and Absorbing Information While Taking Your Time To Decide What The Next Steps Are, which is also fine.
Remove the guilt, and all of a sudden you’re in a conscious, intentional process with yourself. Take away the self-recrimination, and half the time you’ll realize you weren’t actually procrastinating at all. You just thought you were.
The thinking-you-were was actually the thing that was keeping you stuck. And when you’re stuck you can’t be excited and energized to work on doing the thing.
Problem #2: It could totally end up triggering your guilt mechanisms.
Here’s the thing with knowing it’s Anti-Procrastination Day: it triggers guilt. It focuses attention exactly where you don’t want it.
On the negative. On the finger-wagging. On the you-suck parts.
You want to have a Hold My Calls Because I’m Getting Stuff Done Day? Go for it. You want to have a Whoah I’m Practicing Motivating Myself Through Encouragement And Honest, Constructive Suggestions Day? Please. I think that’s a lovely idea.
Or whatever, you can also have a Guilt-Ridden I’m Going To Focus Negative Attention On How Much I Hate My Patterns Day. If that’s what floats your boat. It’s your choice. But don’t come complaining about how you weren’t able to kick yourself hard enough.
Anyone send you this incredibly obnoxious card for our special day? Because that’s what a real live procrastination “expert” recommended. I’m not even making this up.
Or what about this charming quote on procrastination from another “expert” who wants to terrify you into taking action?
“Understand that this enemy is working diligently, 24 hours a day, to prevent any forward progress, so you must work even more diligently at eradicating it from your life.”
Lovely. Thanks. Now I totally want to go get a bunch of stuff done. Oh, no I don’t. I want to curl up in a ball and cry.
There’s more stuff I want to say, but it’s not the time.
Whatever, I could rant a bit longer. There’s another three or four problems I have with Anti-Procrastination Day (unless it’s working for you, in which case, rock on, my friend).
But I’d rather give you something useful. Something that you can take comfort in. Something that will help you feel safe and supported so that you can access the internal and external resources you need to take some action.
Here’s what I’ve got:
- You are not lazy. It’s not even about laziness.
- Sometimes you want to be doing, and sometimes you want to be practicing the art of taking breaks.
- Sometimes it’s good to take that break even when it feels like you don’t have time for it.
- Sometimes the stuff people are telling you to do to “eradicate” your procrastination patterns sound suspiciously like a good way to ensure that you never get anything done.
- Sometimes the moment where you stop trying to whip yourself into shape and start trying to figure out what you need is so calming and centering and magical that the stuff you need just kind of falls into place.
Why am I taking this so seriously?
You’re right. I am a little upset. Let me tell you why.
Because I work with people who have these issues. People who have big, wonderful things to do in the world and are really, really scared sometimes to put it out there. Or even to talk about putting it out there.
I love these people with all my heart. They’re smart, creative and just generally awesome.
And then these so-called experts show up with their war-mongering and guilt-mongering and an entire day devoted to telling my people how much they suck. And it’s all so well-intentioned!
But it doesn’t help them. It makes them feel worse. They withdraw and retreat deeper into the stuff (guilt, criticism and self-loathing) that’s most harmful for them.
I’m here trying to help people who are traumatized by shoulds learn how to motivate themselves with love and attention. And this stuff freaks them out.
What about all the people who totally need help and aren’t getting it because they’re scared? Because they think it might make them feel guilty and horrible about themselves. Because they think they’ve tried what’s out there and know for a fact that nothing can help.
Well, I hope that everyone knows that not all methods involve kicking yourself and hating yourself. Because ohhhhhhh, that’s just got to hurt.
And not all methods involve forcing yourself to be all lovey-dovey and accepting when you don’t freaking feel like it. Because yuck and spare me. And also because it’s just not very realistic.
Where do we go from here?
If I were you I’d read all the articles I pointed you to. If I were you, I’d make up my own National Something Something Day that I thought was going to motivate me to do cool things. If I were you, I’d probably go ask someone I like for a hug.
And take a nap at some point too!
P.S. Did anyone else notice that the initials of National Anti-Procrastination Day spell out NAP DAY? Best acronym ever!
You’ve got my permission to take a nap. Seriously. Everything will be okay.
And if you ever want to go deeper into my approach, I have a product in the shop for dissolving resistance. You don’t have to get it now. All timing is right timing.
Like I said, everything will be okay. It already is.
In the UK we don’t have quite so many National Something Something Days. I’m not sure if that’s good or bad. Or maybe I just don’t know about them.
Anyway, I did create a National Something Something Day recently, and I thought I’d share it.
National Talk Like A Screenreader That Hit a Syntax Error Day
Maybe just one for the geeks?
James | Dancing Geeks last blog post..Kill the to-do list – a nice way to get stuff done
I found the most powerful thing I’ve ever done about procrastination is to stop resisting it. Stop putting all kinds of energy into fighting procrastination or resisting resistance. For me it’s been about simply being in the moment & going w/ the flow in a positive way, instead of forcing it.
But I guess a lot of people make money off of the guilt industry.
BTW, I’m changing my cash flow program b/c calling it a bootcamp was kind of dumb, since it has nothing to do with being hard or sweating or killing people. It will be about creating and money trees or something else fun & positive.
~ Elizabeth
Elizabeth Potts Weinsteins last blog post..Make Credit Work for Small Businesses
Once again, you’ve managed to touch on so many things just in this post that I’ve been approaching the wrong way for eons, that have been my biggest deals, like guilt, for instance, over not being efficient. It’s uncanny, sort of, but then maybe not, because I simply sound like your ideal client, and that makes sense.
You have so much wisdom, Havi. You make me want to follow you around while you talk like this unceasingly and do exercises and wave your hands at me. Like a mentor.
stephs last blog post..Win Free Manuscript or Query Letter Critique Offered by Agent and Acq. Editor
Dick Cheney lives inside of my brain. He’s actually a miniature replica, but he’s very real and very determined to keep me on task at every waking moment. His job is to diligently wait for me to do anything non-work-related or non-billable, and then flick my head with a tiny, electric rubber band. So, every time I visit your blog, take a nap, go outside for any reason whatsoever, or, NATIONAL CRISIS MOMENT–stare into space without doing anything at all (this is the thing he hates most) I get a tiny electric heat flick. It’s annoying, but it doesn’t actually keep me from doing the thing. What it does do is increasingly annoy me so that I do the non-work thing even more, and then I really do wait until the last possible minute to do the work thing. This is how he supports himself, because paradoxically, when he snaps my head with his electric rubber brand, that activates a miniature gumball machine, and he so he gets all hopped up on gumballs all day, making him increasingly trigger happy. And me increasingly irritable. Anyway, I need to let him go. We’ve got an election coming up, so this is as good a time as ever. Thanks for the reminder! I’m going to start by giving him the rest of the day off.
Kelly Parkinsons last blog post..How to Always Be Right
LOL, Kelly, that is the most terrifying thing I have read all day. I definitely think it is time to fire Dick.
Sonia Simones last blog post..Does Your Business Have the Support It Needs?
The only one of those National something something days that I really kick myself about missing every year is National Talk Like a Pirate Day. Could someone arrange for that one to be printed in commercially available planners?
All good points. I love Kelly’s image. Don’t get all stressed. We need you to destress us.
JoVEs last blog post..Coming out of my knitting funk
Some expert actually called it “this enemy”? Yow.
I’m tempted to create “National Procrastination Day.” A whole day of guilt-free, permission-granted procrastinating!
National Procrastination Day? Nah, I’ll do that later…
Thanks for all your really wonderful procrastination info. Since I read your Dissolving Procrastination sampler I haven’t stopped doing things I want to do. I’m almost ashamed to say I was so busy I even put off buying the full package (embarrassed looking smiley would go here, except I keep putting off learning to type one, but I’m cool with that).
Well, maybe I’d better buy the package before I read any of those links, and before Sunday, of course…
Thanks hugely!
Gary Fletchers last blog post..Are Good Ideas Killing Your Projects?
You should be upset. These jerks are trying to bully us in to getting things done. No one likes a bully.
We need to meet our procrastination halfway. If all we do is kick ourselves in the ass, we’re going to end up with a bruised ass.
It’s the same when a person does Yoga. S/he meets their muscle at the tight spot and gently cajoles it to open up. The muscle becomes a friend, not an enemy. And we all need more friends.
Karl – Work Happy Nows last blog post..How Transitions Can Dramatically Improve Your Productivity
Oh my goodness, I love all of your National Something Something Days.
Also that Dick Cheney is in @Kelly’s head. No, that’s screwed up. But it totally made me laugh.
You guys are the best. And I’ve calmed down a bit by now too!
@Gary – You crack me up!
@Steph – *blows kiss*. I think you’re pretty great too.
Thank you so much for this article. Seriously, this is probably the best thing I’ve read since Victoria Nelson’s On Writer’s Block. For me, the two are the same: writer’s block is procrastination. At least when it rears up as writer’s block I can sort of identify the emotional processes at work. But most of the time it’s just a terrible mishmash of psychological suck.
This article is one of the most intelligent, spot-on, and compassionate things I’ve read about procrastination in all its forms. Thank you so much.
So I hear you have this book out…? 😀