How to become a
non-procrastinator in 5 not-so-easy steps?
I know I haven’t
written a blog post in a very long time. In my defence, I have been very busy
for the past year. I graduated college with a post grad diploma, completed a
mandatory internship under a toxic supervisor, finished writing a novel,
started my first job and have started querying the novel (and also amassed a
respectable number of rejection slips).
So what drove me
to write this now? Well, my schedule certainly hasn’t gotten any less grinding.
But I guess you could say I had an epiphany. I found (or at least think I
found) the answer to a question that has been bugging me for a while now. To
fully understand this question and subsequently, its answer, you’d first need
to know a bit of background information about my life.
I was a terrible
student, particularly in school. In fact, I was so terrible as a student, being
bad at academics kind of became my USP – almost a part of my identity. And this
was a problem. A terrible, traumatising problem, really. I come from a middle
class, Indian family. My family (and my society, really) places a high value on
academic achievement. The school you go to, the grades you get, the things that
are said about you at parent-teacher meets have very real consequences on the
quality of your life, your standing amongst your peer group, the way people see
you and perhaps most importantly, the way you see yourself.
It is important
to point out, here, that I wanted to be a good student. Wanted it desperately,
in fact. I would have given anything to be one. To get good grades and to be
praised by my teachers. To make my parents proud. I cannot overemphasize the
extent to which I wanted all of that. I wanted it so bad it was almost
pathetic.
But for the
entirety of my school life, I never achieved it. Hell, I never even came close
to achieving it. It was nothing but a mixture of pure, dumb luck, and an
aptitude for sounding more knowledgeable than I was (particularly in writing),
that kept me from having to repeat a class. Which comes with its own baggage
and associated stigmas, but that’s a rant for another time.
My problems with
academics were not, however, a problem of aptitude. It wasn’t that I could not
understand the course material, it was simply that I could never even bring
myself to read it. Nobody understood why I didn’t do better at school – not my
parents, not my teachers. Not even the one psychologist that I forced my
parents to take me to, in a state of desperation. The thing is, I didn’t
understand it either. Why could I not just read the chapter for which I had a
test tomorrow? It was as much a mystery to me as it was to anybody else; a fact
that to this day, I have not been able to explain to my parents.
Procrastination – the great adversary
Eventually, in
high school, I learned about the concept of procrastination. I self-diagnosed
as a chronic procrastinator and pretty much accepted that fate. It was a
relief, really, to finally have a name, a label for all those years of
confusion, despair and self-hatred. I accepted my propensity for
self-destructive levels of procrastination and even (in some moments of
defensiveness and general dysfunction) gloried in it. And life went on, as it
has a tendency to do.
But then,
something happened. By the time I had graduated college, my problems with
procrastination had diminished significantly. By the time I got my post-grad
diploma and stepped into the workforce, they had all but disappeared
altogether. I was more productive than I had ever been before in my life.
And don’t get me
wrong. I was happy, I was bloody ecstatic about this change. But I didn’t know
what had brought it about, and that fact kept bugging me. Not knowing kept me
feeling vulnerable. Because if I didn’t know what had caused it the first time
and how I had managed to overcome it, what would I do if it ever happened
again? Procrastination had made my teenage years a self-perpetuating cycle of
misery, self-loathing, stress and fear. I most certainly did not want to repeat
that phase again.
And then, it
struck me. Just this evening, if I’m to be honest with you. I finally know what
had caused the chronic procrastination, and what finally stopped it.
Perfectionism – the invisible villain
The culprit,
believe it or not, was a strange kind of destructive perfectionism. I call it
strange because I would not, in a million years, have pegged myself for a
perfectionist. To me, the word perfectionism brings to mind an image of
ambitious, Type A, high-achieving, high-flying, workaholics. I was not, and
still am not, any of those things. On the contrary, I am a pretty laid back
person whose idea of a fantastic evening is a cup of coffee and a good movie
(or a great book). I could not be more Type B if I tried. So how could I be a
perfectionist?
Turns out, I
was. Well, it would be wrong to say that it was just perfectionism that was the problem. It is also true that I
found schoolwork largely boring and I suppose the excessive external pressure
that most students are put under also played a role. But I’ll tell you why I
think perfectionism was the biggest culprit in causing and perpetuating my
chronic procrastination.
So, say I have a
test next week and the syllabus consists of seven chapters. I would create an
exact schedule for the next seven days in order to prepare for this test. I
would map out my exact study plan, decide on my schedule for reading, revision,
practice and so forth. Then, I would begin.
The thing was,
this entire master plan consisted of a number of sub-plans. When I would begin
each chapter, when I would end it, when I would revise, etc. And if I failed to
achieve any one of these goals, (which I inevitably did as I put so much
pressure on myself), I would feel compelled to start all over again. Or to give
up altogether. Or to start again the next day, when of course the same problem
would repeat itself. This was my perfectionism sabotaging me, without me even
realising it. I was completely and utterly unaware of this entire subconscious
process, that I went through over and over again for several years.
My perfectionism
told me that if I couldn’t follow a study plan perfectly, I couldn’t study at all. And because this perfection was
so difficult to achieve, my brain kept delaying it as much as possible, pulling
me away to do other things.
And when I did
finally get around to studying, the same miserable cycle would repeat itself. I
would try to study, to get it all exactly right, follow the plan to the letter.
And then, inevitably, I would fail to achieve one of those goals and the entire
thing would be sent into a tailspin and I would feel compelled to start over
again or to abandon the process altogether. Which is what I did, and paid the
price for it for almost the entirety of my academic life. And not just
academically either, but socially and emotionally as well, which I would say
had a much more lasting effect than any academic failures that I experienced
during the period.
It amazes me how
this could have happened so consistently, and for so many years, without me
being aware of it in any way whatsoever. And because I wasn’t aware of it, I didn’t
know how to deal with it or overcome it. You can’t, after all, fight an enemy that
you don’t even know exists.
So what changed?
And now, we come
to the reason why I am writing this in the first place. To tell you (my
understanding of) how I finally overcame my procrastination problem. I would
like to say that for the longest time, I was as unaware of my recovery as I had
been of the disease itself. It was not until just a few months ago that I
finally noticed the fact that, hey! I had completed my education, managed to
get myself a cash award for academic excellence, finished writing a novel,
landed a job and was doing reasonably well at said job. I was being more productive than I had ever
been before and it didn’t even feel like I was swimming against a tsunami. So,
what the hell changed?
What changed is
that on the long and tortuous road to adulthood, I came across, and almost
unconsciously implemented, some amazing pearls of wisdom. Five of them, to be
exact. I’ll try and explain them below, in no particular order.
1. Give yourself the freedom to fail
I
know I said I wouldn’t talk about them in any particular order, but this is
indubitably the most important one. And so I am listing it first. If you
remember nothing of this post, do remember this. Because failure is inevitable.
It happens to everyone, no matter how safe you play it. You will fail. A person who has never
failed is a person who has never aimed for anything but the most low-hanging
fruits, and even that is not a
fool-proof strategy.
So to fail or not to fail is not within our control. Failure, like
the common cold, is something that happens to almost everybody at one point or
another. The only thing we can
control, then, is how we deal with failure.
In school, my perfectionism made me deal with failure by mentally
punishing myself. By making me start the project over again or by avoiding it
altogether. And that is what led to my chronic procrastination. The fact that I
could not forgive myself for failing, and tried to subconsciously escape the
pain of it by simply not trying in the first place. After all, you can’t fail
at something you never did.
I guess as I got older, I learned to be kinder to myself. I accepted
the fact that I would fail; not once, but over and over again. And that that
was alright, so long as I kept trying. I learned to be proud of every rejection
letter I received for my novel. Because hell, they were physical (or at least
electronic) proof of the fact that I tried. And that brings me to my next
point…
2. Do your worst work
I read this on an online forum, though I have now forgotten what the
forum was for. It’s true when you think about it, though, isn’t it? The worst
book that you could possibly write is still better than the perfect book that
never gets written. Doing your worst work is better than doing nothing in the
hope of eventual perfection, which is what I basically did for the majority of
my academic career. In the pursuit of that elusive master plan, I ended up
spending a whole bunch of time doing absolutely nothing. Because not only could
I not study, I couldn’t do anything else with that time either, as all the
while I was feeling guilty for not studying. So I just spent hour after hour
mired in guilt, hopelessness and an endless series of llama videos (which
weren’t so bad).
Additionally, when you give yourself the mental permission to do
your worst work, guess what happens? The pressure lifts. The stress vanishes.
It becomes easier to get into the flow of whatever it is that you are doing.
And the end result is rarely as bad as you thought it would be. And if it is?
Well, it’s still infinitely better than nothing. Giving myself permission to do
my worst work was probably the single best thing I did for my productivity in
my entire life.
3. Go one step at a timeAnother thing that always triggered my procrastination, as I now realise, was envisioning the entirety of a large project. Completing an entire syllabus, writing a whole book, acing the finals. You get the picture. These huge goals seemed like mountains that were impossible to climb; a dark tunnel to which there was no end in sight. What was needed was a reframing of the problem, which I didn’t do because I wasn’t consciously aware of the problem at the time. The point is, writing a whole book only seems hard if you think of it as being a whole book. What if you thought of it as a whole lot of 500-word scenes?
You didn’t have to write all the scenes. You just had to write one.
And then, when you were done with that, you just had to write one more. Anyone
with a keyboard can type out 500 words. And remember, they don’t have to be 500
perfect words. They can be 500 of the worst words you have ever written, and
that would be a victory too. Because you have given yourself the permission to
do your worst work.
And you can miss writing your 500 words one day, and that would be
perfectly fine. It doesn’t mean that you have to start over or give up on the
project. You can write it the next day. Or the night after that. Because
remember, you have given yourself the freedom to fail, and to keep going even
after you have failed. So really, all that you have to do is put one foot in
front of the other. Type the word after the last one. Read the page after the
last one. And simply doing that makes you a winner.
4. Take tiny bites
This point is, in a way, an extension of the last one. That is to
say that even when I was taking one step at a time, setting myself big interim
goals still tripped me up and triggered my procrastination. If I promised
myself that I would write one whole scene in an evening, or read an entire
chapter, then I felt a need to keep that promise. Now these goals weren’t too
hard, and most of the time I would have no trouble completing them. But we’re
all human, and sometimes, life happens. You get caught up on YouTube or find
yourself incapable of hanging up on a distraught friend with too much alcohol
in her system. And then you fail to reach that seemingly reasonable goal and
boom! There goes the perfectionism fuelled procrastination monster again.
The way I got around this was to set goals that were so ridiculously
easy, they would be impossible to miss. Read one page. Write a hundred words.
So on and so forth. And when I was done with that goal, if I still had time, I
would set myself another ridiculously easy goal. Read the next page. Write
another hundred words. So even if one day I found myself with just 15 minutes
of free time before bedtime, I still had enough time to achieve my goals and
feel like I had taken one step forward, no matter how tiny. Taking really tiny
bites, setting up laughably easy goals, are how you make a dent on an
impossibly large problem.
5. The next day is the first day of the rest of your life
I heard this one on a Ted Talk video. See? Those hours of browsing
aimlessly through YouTube weren’t a complete waste after all! Well, I took the
advice to its logical conclusion. The next minute is the first minute of the rest
of your life.
One of my main problems with procrastination was that if I did one
thing wrong, if I missed a single goal, that mistake or failure cast a long
shadow over the rest of the project. So I would feel like since I have gotten
this particular thing wrong, I will inevitably get the rest of it wrong too.
This thought process put me under undue stress and again, made me want to avoid
the whole thing all together. If I messed up once, I messed up the whole thing.
I would feel like I’ll have to start the whole thing over again or just put the
project on hiatus and try again the next day, or the next week. I simply could
not grasp the concept of cutting your losses and moving on.
But what if every new minute was an opportunity for a new beginning?
I didn’t have to put off rectifying my mistake for a whole new day. I had a
whole new minute waiting for me at the end of sixty seconds. Everything that
happened before the next minute is irrelevant, the problems of another time.
The next minute is literally the first one to the rest of your life. Even if
you have made an absolute mess of your life up until the last minute, that
baggage does not have to carry over to the next minute. With every minute that
passes, you can choose to start a whole new narrative for the rest of your
life. The failures and successes of the past are irrelevant.
It is only the future that matters. To think of the next moment as
the first one of the rest of your life is the best way I have found to cut my
losses and shed the baggage of past mistakes, both recent and old. I mean sure,
I made some mistakes in the past. But I don’t have to repeat them in this new
phase of my life. If you train yourself to think like this, every moment can be
a new beginning, a whole new era. And the perfectionism monster can’t tell you
you’re a loser for past mistakes and failures.
Bonus:
This is not directly related to the procrastination problem, but it
is another pearl of pithy wisdom that I heartily believe in, and that has had a
transformative effect on how I view the world and live my life.
-
Don’t think for more than five minutes about something that won’t
matter after five years.
Practice Practice Practice
Here’s the
thing, though. All of these are easier said than done. Simply reading about the
solution to a problem won’t help you get rid of it. That’s just the first step,
though an important one. You have to train your mind to believe in all of these
points, to implement them and to live by them even when it seems impossibly
hard. And you won’t succeed the first time. The procrastination monster doesn’t
give up that easy, and perfectionism sticketh closer than a brother.
But here’s the
thing. That’s ok. Because you have the universe’s permission to fail, and even
the worst attempt at recovery is better than none. You can simply implement one
of these remedies at a time; you don’t have to do them all at once. And you can
break them up into smaller chunks if that helps you process the entire thing
better. And if you ever slip up and go back to your old, procrastinating ways?
Well, you can wipe the slate clean and start over again the very next minute.
Because, after all, what better way to kick off the first minute of the rest of
your life?
Want my advice?
Practice practice practice. If you do it enough times, it will become second
nature. Believe me, it really does get easier with time. And practice.
P.S. This blog
post, in all probability, is not perfect. But if it turns out to be even
marginally useful to even a single person that reads it, then in my opinion
it’s a great, roaring success.
See? That’s the
power of setting teeny goals. You improve your chances of reaching them!