Ending
Procrastination by Jim Rohn
Perseverance
is about as important to achievement as gasoline is to driving a car. Sure,
there will be times when you feel like you're spinning your wheels, but you'll
always get out of the rut with genuine perseverance. Without it, you won't even
be able to start your engine.
The
opposite of perseverance is procrastination. Perseverance means you never quit.
Procrastination usually means you never get started, although the inability to
finish something is also a form of procrastination.
Ask
people why they procrastinate and you'll often hear something like this:
"I'm a perfectionist. Everything has to be just right before I can get down
to work. No distractions, not too much noise, no telephone calls interrupting
me, and of course I have to be feeling well physically, too. I can't work when I
have a headache." The other end of procrastination - being unable to finish
- also has a perfectionist explanation: "I'm just never satisfied. I'm my
own harshest critic. If all the i's aren't dotted and all the t's aren't
crossed, I just can't consider that I'm done. That's just the way I am, and I'll
probably never change."
Do
you see what's going on here? A fault is being turned into a virtue. The
perfectionist is saying that his standards are just too high for this world.
This fault-into-virtue syndrome is a common defense when people are called upon
to discuss their weaknesses, but in the end it's just a very pious kind of
excuse making. It certainly doesn't have anything to do with what's really
behind procrastination.
Remember,
the basis of procrastination could be fear of failure.
That's what perfectionism really is, once you take a hard look at it.
What's the difference whether you're afraid of being less than perfect or afraid
of anything else? You're still paralyzed by fear. What's the difference whether
you never start or never finish? You're still stuck. You're still going nowhere.
You're still overwhelmed by whatever task is before you.
You’re still allowing yourself to be dominated by a negative vision of
the future in which you see yourself being criticized, laughed at, punished, or
ridden out of town on a rail. Of course, this negative vision of the future is
really a mechanism that allows you to do nothing.
It's a very convenient mental tool.
I'm
going to tell you how to overcome procrastination. I'm going to show you how to
turn procrastination into perseverance, and if you do what I suggest, the
process will be virtually painless. It involves using two very powerful
principles that foster productivity and perseverance instead of passivity and
procrastination.
The
first principle is: break it down.
No
matter what you're trying to accomplish, whether it's writing a book, climbing a
mountain, or painting a house the key to achievement is your ability to break
down the task into manageable pieces and knock them off one at one time. Focus
on accomplishing what's right in front of you at this moment. Ignore what's off
in the distance someplace. Substitute real-time positive thinking for negative
future visualization. That's the first all- important technique for bringing an
end to procrastination.
Suppose
I were to ask you if you could write a four hundred-page novel. If you're like
most people, that would sound like an impossible task. But suppose I ask you a
different question. Suppose
I ask if you can write a page and a quarter a day for one year. Do you think you
could do it? Now the task is starting to seem more manageable. We're breaking
down the four-hundred-page book into bite-size pieces. Even so, I suspect many
people would still find the prospect intimidating. Do you know why? Writing a
page and a quarter may not seem so bad, but you're being asked to look ahead one
whole year. When people start to do look that far ahead, many of them
automatically go into a negative mode.
So let me formulate the idea of writing a book in yet another way.
Let me break it down even more.
Suppose
I was to ask you: can you fill up a page and a quarter with words-not for a
year, not for a month, not even for a week, but just today? Don't look any
further ahead than that. I believe most people would confidently declare that
they could accomplish that. Of course, these would be the same people who feel
totally incapable of writing a whole book.
If
I said the same thing to those people tomorrow - if I told them, I don't want
you to look back, and I don't want you to look ahead, I just want you to fill up
a page and a quarter this very day - do you think they could do it?
One
day at a time. We've all heard that phrase. That's what we're doing here. We're
breaking down the time required for a major task into one-day segments, and
we're breaking down the work involved in writing a four hundred-page book into
page-and-a-quarter increments.
Keep
this up for one year, and you'll write the book. Discipline yourself to look
neither forward nor backward, and you can accomplish things you never thought
you could possibly do. And it all begins with those three words: break it down.
My
second technique for defeating procrastination is also only three words long.
The three words are: write it down. We know how important writing is to goal
setting. The writing you'll do for beating procrastination is very similar.
Instead of focusing on the future, however, you're now going to be writing about
the present just as you experience it every day. Instead of describing the
things you want to do or the places you want to go, you're going to describe
what you actually do with your time, and you're going to keep a written record
of the places you actually go.
In
other words, you're going to keep a diary of your activities.
And you're going to be amazed by the distractions, detours, and downright
wastes of time you engage in during the course of a day.
All of these get in the way of achieving your goals. For many people,
it's almost like they planned it that way, and maybe at some unconscious level
they did. The great thing about keeping a time diary is that it brings all this
out in the open. It forces you to see what you're actually doing . . . and what
you're not doing.
The
time diary doesn't have to be anything elaborate. Just buy a little spiral
notebook that you can easily carry in your pocket.
When you go to lunch, when you drive across town, when you go to the dry
cleaners, when you spend some time shooting the breeze at the copying machine,
make a quick note of the time you began the activity and the time it ends. Try
to make this notation as soon as possible; if it's inconvenient to do it
immediately, you can do it later. But you should make an entry in your time
diary at least once every thirty minutes, and you should keep this up for at
least a week.
Break
it down. Write it down. These two techniques are very straightforward. But don't
let that fool you: these are powerful and effective productivity techniques.
This is how you put an end to procrastination. This is how you get yourself
started.
To
Your Success,
Jim Rohn