|
Post by Eugene 2.0 on Apr 24, 2021 15:32:46 GMT
Umm... I'm so disappointed... I can't quit procrastination... I guess it's easy to stop smoking or drinking, then to drop procrastination syndrome down. I've watched few videos, and read articles about it, but those methods appeared to be weak. Maybe, just one of them - to do many deeds at the same time. Now I'm practicing exactly this last one, and this is the only method that helps a little. What practical methods do you know to overcome that nasty passion - the passion of procrastination?
|
|
antor
Junior Member
Posts: 87
Likes: 51
Country: Sweden
Politics: Middle Left something
Religion: Apatheist
Age: 35
|
Post by antor on Apr 24, 2021 16:53:13 GMT
I almost always do it to somoe degree. Especially when I was in school. I accepted it, and made sure I dont do it WAY too much. A little is ok, and thinking like that makes it easier to live with. I mean its still a problem but everyone has problems. Good routines help alot too.
|
|
|
Post by Elizabeth on Apr 24, 2021 17:45:26 GMT
I just know that I'll end up losing sleep if I don't do something on time. And I love sleep so it's usually not hard for me to fight it. Like I've something to get done by Monday. It'll probably take me 12 hours to do it. I hope to do most of it today if not all of it. I'll probably stay up just a little but who knows.
|
|
|
Post by fschmidt on Apr 30, 2021 23:14:00 GMT
Keeping the sabbath is a practical exercise to overcome procrastination. If you are Christian, I suggest keeping the sabbath from Saturday sunset to Sunday sunset. The idea is that any chores that you don't do by Saturday sunset, you can't do until Sunday sunset. So any unwashed dishes, trash not taken out, or whatever, will just sit there for a full day reminding you that you didn't take care of these things in time.
|
|
|
Post by Eugene 2.0 on May 1, 2021 8:08:01 GMT
Keeping the sabbath is a practical exercise to overcome procrastination. If you are Christian, I suggest keeping the sabbath from Saturday sunset to Sunday sunset. The idea is that any chores that you don't do by Saturday sunset, you can't do until Sunday sunset. So any unwashed dishes, trash not taken out, or whatever, will just sit there for a full day reminding you that you didn't take care of these things in time. It is a really good practice! One good friend of mine who had moved to live in Israel told me that his life schedule became much more healthy because of practicing sabbath.
|
|