Are you always short of time? Do you wish you had more than 24 hours in a day? Well, if you make a list of things which leads to your poor time management, you will find a monster in it - Procrastination!
Procrastination has become one of the biggest challenges for professionals and individuals alike in managing time. The word procrastination comes from the Latin word, ‘Pro’ meaning “in favor of” and ‘Cras’ meaning “tomorrow”.
It is defined therefore as “The act or the habit of delaying or putting things off’.
No doubt it is a one way ticket to stress, guilt and overwhelm.
Let me share a funny story I read which can be linked with procrastination and its impact.
It's the story of a turtle family. The family consists of Dad, Mom and the Baby turtle. The Baby turtle was very lazy and always postpones anything and everything assigned to him.
One day Mom, Dad and Baby turtle go on a picnic. When they arrive at the park, it appears that it’s about to rain. Mom turtle asks Baby turtle to run home and get an umbrella so that they can enjoy the picnic as planned, rain or shine.
Baby turtle as always said, " No I can't go, why don't you go and get it? ". Dad turtle got annoyed and gives the Baby turtle an angry look. With a pale face Baby turtle finally said, “If I go home and get the umbrella, do you promise you won't start lunch without me?” Mom turtle assures Baby turtle that they will wait for him before eating.
With this confirmation, Baby turtle leaves. Ten minutes go by and Baby turtle has not returned. An hour passes. A full day. Neither Mom or Dad turtle have eaten anything and become very hungry. They wonder what is taking Baby turtle so long, and hope he is okay.
Finally, Mom turtle says to Dad turtle, “Well, he hasn't come back yet. We might as well eat something.” At which point Baby turtle pokes his head out from behind a tree and screams, “If you eat, I won't go! I know you will do this, that's why I was hiding and watching what you will do! ”
Now, I know this is a silly story, but there is some important message in this story. The lesson is in the fact that Baby turtle reminds many of us and our habit of procrastination. His mom told him they would wait for him, but he chose to hide behind a tree and take rest when he was actually supposed to do the work assigned to him. He wasted everyone’s time, and ruined the picnic that was planned.
There are many reasons why we avoid doing things, sometimes it seems strange that, we know what we have to do to be successful but we don't do it.
The key to happiness, satisfaction, great success and a wonderful feeling of personal power and effectiveness is for us to develop the habit of practicing these great ways to stop procrastinating and get more things done faster :
Set the Table: Decide exactly what we want. Write out our goals and objectives before we begin.
Plan every day in advance: Think on paper. Every minute we spend in planning can save our five or ten minutes in execution.
Apply the 80/20 rule to everything: 20% of our activities will account for 80% of our results. Always concentrate our efforts on that top 20%.
Practice creative procrastination: Since we can't do everything, we must learn to deliberately put off those tasks that are of low value so that we have enough time to do the few things that really count.
Focus on key result areas: Identify and determine those results that we absolutely, positively have to get to do our job well, and work on all day long.
The law of three: Identify the three things we do in our work that account for 90% of our contribution, and focus on getting them done before anything else.
Prepare thoroughly before we begin: Have everything we need at hand before we start. Assemble all papers, information, tools, work materials etc. we might require so we can get started and keep going.
Take it one oil barrel at a time: We can accomplish the biggest and most complicated job if we just complete it one step at a time.
Leverage our key skills: The more knowledgeable and skilled we become at our key tasks, the faster we start them and the sooner we get them done.
Identify our key constraints: Determine the bottlenecks or choke points, internal or external, that set the speed at which we achieve our most important goals, and focus on alleviating them.
Put the pressure on ourselves: Imagine that we have to leave town for a month and work as if we had to get all our major tasks completed before we leave.
Motivate ourselves into action: Be our own cheer leader. Look for the good in every situation. Focus on solution than problem.
Get out of the technological time sinks: Use technology to improve the quality of our communications, but do not allow ourselves to become a slave to it.
Slice and dice the task: Break large, complex tasks down into bite-sized pieces, and then do just one small part of the task to get started.
Develop a sense of urgency: Make a habit of moving fast on our key tasks. Become known as a person who does things quickly and well.
I am sure you must have come across several articles teaching us how to stop procrastination. Sometimes, we follow it, and some other times we lose track after a certain time. It's all about being disciplined and strong willed regarding managing this crucial aspect of our life in an efficient way. The best way to do it is just start the new regime with immediate effect. Once we are successful in overcoming procrastination - “the villain in time management”, we will find more time at our disposal and we will emerge as a winner in every phase of our life.
In the epic “Mahabharata”, addressing King Yudhishthira, Bhishma said,
“The one that provides for the future, and the one who possesses the presence of mind, always enjoys happiness. The man of procrastination, however, is the loser ".
So unlike the Baby turtle, I'm on my way to get that umbrella, and I can't wait to return to a feast with those I love. I better get on it, as they are hungry and waiting on me! How about you?