(By Heidi Grant Halvorson)
“Somewhere
along the way, we’ve all bought into the idea – without consciously realizing
it – that to be motivated and effective we need to feel like we want
to take action. We need to be eager to do so. I really don’t know
why we believe this, because it is 100% nonsense. Yes, on some level you need
to be committed to what you are doing – you need to want to see the project
finished, or get healthier, or get an earlier start to your day. But you
don’t need to feel like doing it.“
There’s
that project you’ve left on the backburner – the one with the deadline that’s
growing uncomfortably near. And there’s the client whose phone call you
really should return – the one that does nothing but complain and eat up your
valuable time. Wait, weren’t you going to try to go to the gym more often
this year?
Can
you imagine how much less guilt, stress, and frustration you would feel if you
could somehow just make yourself do the things you don’t want to do when you
are actually supposed to do them? Not to mention how much happier and
more effective you would be?
The
good news (and its very good news) is that you can get better about not putting
things off, if you use the right strategy. Figuring out which strategy to
use depends on why you are procrastinating in the first place:
Reason #1 You are putting something off because
you are afraid you will screw it up.
Solution:
Adopt a “prevention focus.”
There
are two ways to look at any task. You can do something because you see it
as a way to end up better off than you are now – as an
achievement or accomplishment. As in, if I complete this project
successfully I will impress my boss, or if I work out
regularly I will look amazing. Psychologists call this a promotion
focus – and research shows that when you have one, you are motivated
by the thought of making gains, and work best when you feel eager and
optimistic. Sounds good, doesn’t it? Well, if you are afraid you
will screw up on the task in question, this is notthe focus for
you. Anxiety and doubt undermine promotion motivation, leaving you less
likely to take any action at all.
What
you need is a way of looking at what you need to do that isn’t undermined by
doubt – ideally, one that thrives on it. When you have a prevention
focus, instead of thinking about how you can end up better off, you see the
task as a way to hang on to what you’ve already got – to avoid
loss. For the prevention-focused, successfully completing a project is a way to
keep your boss from being angry or thinking less of you. Working out
regularly is a way to not “let yourself go.” Decades of research, which I
describe in my book Focus, shows that prevention motivation is
actually enhanced by anxiety about what might go wrong. When you are
focused on avoiding loss, it becomes clear that the only way to get out of
danger is to take immediate action. The more worried you are, the faster
you are out of the gate.
I
know this doesn’t sound like a barrel of laughs, particularly if you are
usually more the promotion-minded type, but there is probably no better way to
get over your anxiety about screwing up than to give some serious thought to
all the dire consequences of doing nothing at all. Go on,
scare the pants off yourself. It feels awful, but it works.
Reason #2 You are putting something
off because you don’t “feel” like doing it.
Solution:
Make like Spock and ignore your feelings. They’re getting in your way.
In
his excellent book The Antidote: Happiness for People Who Can’t Stand
Positive Thinking, Oliver Burkeman points out that much of the time, when
we say things like “I just can’t get out of bed early in the morning, “ or “I
just can’t get myself to exercise,” what we really mean is that we can’t get
ourselves to feel like doing these things. After all, no
one is tying you to your bed every morning. Intimidating bouncers aren’t
blocking the entrance to your gym. Physically, nothing is stopping you –
you just don’t feel like it. But as Burkeman asks, “Who says you
need to wait until you ‘feel like’ doing something in order to start doing it?”
Think
about that for a minute, because it’s really important. Somewhere along the
way, we’ve all bought into the idea – without consciously realizing it – that
to be motivated and effective we need to feel like we want to
take action. We need to be eager to do so. I really don’t know why
we believe this, because it is 100% nonsense. Yes, on some level you need to be
committed to what you are doing – you need to want to see the project finished,
or get healthier, or get an earlier start to your day. But you don’t need
to feel like doing it.
In
fact, as Burkeman points out, many of the most prolific artists, writers, and
innovators have become so in part because of their reliance on work routines
that forced them to put in a certain number of hours a day, no matter how
uninspired (or, in many instances, hungover) they might have felt.
Burkeman reminds us of renown artist Chuck Close’s observation that
“Inspiration is for amateurs. The rest of us just show up and get to
work.”
So
if you are sitting there, putting something off because you don’t feel like it,
remember that you don’t actually need to feel like it. There is
nothing stopping you.
Reason #3 You are putting something off because
it’s hard, boring, or otherwise unpleasant.
Solution:
Use if-then planning.
Too
often, we try to solve this particular problem with sheer will: Next
time, I will make myself start working on this sooner.
Of course, if we actually had the willpower to do that, we
would never put it off in the first place. Studies show that people
routinely overestimate their capacity for self-control, and rely on it too
often to keep them out of hot water.
Do
yourself a favor, and embrace the fact that your willpower is limited, and that
it may not always be up to the challenge of getting you to do things you find
difficult, tedious, or otherwise awful. Instead, use if-then
planning to get the job done.
Making
an if-then plan is more than just deciding what specific steps
you need to take to complete a project – it’s also deciding where and when you
will take them.
If it is 2pm, then I will stop what I’m doing
and start work on the report Bob asked for.
If my boss doesn’t mention my request for a raise at our
meeting, then I will bring it up again before the meeting
ends.
By
deciding in advance exactly what you’re going to do, and when
and where you’re going to do it, there’s no deliberating when the time
comes. No do I really have to do this now?, or can
this wait till later? or maybe I should do something else
instead. It’s when we deliberate that willpower becomes
necessary to make the tough choice. But if-then plans dramatically reduce
the demands placed on your willpower, by ensuring that you’ve made the right decision
way ahead of the critical moment. In fact, if-then planning
has been shown in over 200 studies to increase rates of goal attainment and
productivity by 200%-300% on average.
I
realize that the three strategies I’m offering you – thinking about the
consequences of failure, ignoring your feelings, and engaging in detailed
planning – don’t sound as fun as advice like “Follow your passion!” or “Stay
positive!” But they have the decided advantage of actually being effective
–which, as it happens, is exactly what you’ll be if you use them.
(Source: HBR)
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