Vol. 71, No. 9,
September 1998
Healthy Lawyer
Overcoming Procrastination
Those little tasks you can't get motivated to perform will accumulate
and become stressful if you put them off. Here are nine creative methods
for attacking bothersome chores.
By Margaret S. Spencer
Everyone procrastinates sometimes. The insidious thing about procrastination
is that only you know when you are really procrastinating. Getting a cup
of coffee, stopping by a friend's office to chat, or even working industriously
on a low-priority project are typical methods of putting things off. Here
are some techniques to help procrastinators keep on track.
Don't try to do it all at once.
All too often, we procrastinate on starting a project because we won't
have time to finish the whole thing in one sitting. This kind of all-or-nothing
thinking is not helpful, since we rarely have large chunks of free time
miraculously appear before us. See how much you can accomplish by chipping
away at a project for 15 to 20 minutes at a time. Appreciate the cumulative
value of small chunks of time: 15 minutes every working day adds up to about
55 hours over the course of a year. This simple math can help us see the
value of putting even small amounts of time to good use on a daily basis.
Start anywhere.
Starting "at the very beginning - a very good place to start"
makes sense when one is singing a song. A song has only one logical place
to start. Most work projects, however, have many places to start, each of
which is about as good as the other. Yet frequently we deter ourselves from
starting at all because we can't decide on the best place to begin. We lose
sight of the fact that just starting anywhere is better than not starting
at all. So when you have been procrastinating on a big project, take the
first step: just get started - anywhere.
Start imperfectly.
Another paralyzing mindset is perfectionism - the belief that everything
we do must be outstanding at all times. The early stage of a project is
not the time to worry about getting everything right. If you start in plenty
of time, you'll be able to edit, rewrite, and double-check facts and citations.
One way to crash through the wall of perfectionism is to start with an obvious
error, which you will edit out later. Another approach is the letter writing
technique. For example: "Dear Mom: Today at work I'm supposed to be
drafting a brief. Let me tell you about the facts of the case ... ."
Take the "drive yourself crazy by doing nothing" approach.
Assemble all the materials for the project, arrange them in front of
you on your desk, and then sit at your desk and do nothing for seven minutes
(by the clock). Don't even write down any of the ideas that are sure to
come to you during this period. By the end of the seven minutes, you'll
be itching to start. Incidentally, the reason for seven minutes is to make
sure you do sit for seven actual minutes. "Five minutes" or "ten
minutes" tend to become concepts rather than actual time periods.
Work no more than 15 minutes at a time.
This is my favorite anti-procrastination method. Set a timer - a
wristwatch alarm is a discreet alternative - and decide to work full
blast on a project for the next 15 minutes. When the timer goes off, decide
immediately whether to stop at that moment or to reset the timer and work
for another 15 minutes. Most of the time, I've built up enough interest
in a project after 15 minutes that I don't want to stop when the timer buzzes.
I've worked for hours using this method, yet it never feels that long because
I know that a break is never further than 15 minutes away.
Start even when you're not in the mood.
Sigmund Freud once said, "When inspiration does not come to me,
I go halfway to meet it." You don't have to be inspired to start on
something. If you wait for inspiration, you run the risk that it might never
come. It's more reliable to train yourself to start to work, then see if
the ideas start to flow. Establish the daily habit of settling down to work
during your usual high-energy periods, so that your muse knows when and
where to find you, if it so desires.
Realize that unpleasant tasks don't get easier over time.
If anything, unpleasant tasks become more so when we put them off. Even
worse, the worry over not working on a project takes at least as much energy
as just getting on with the task. It's like swimming in the ocean when the
water's cold. Some prefer to run quickly into the surf and deal with the
shock in a few frigid seconds. Others stretch out the agony by stepping
in inch-by-shivering-inch. I've finally learned that it's easier to take
a deep breath, plunge in, and get the agony over with as soon as possible.
Schedule a "hell day."
Here's a way to attack all those annoying little tasks that are so easy
to ignore. A friend of mine tells me that every month or so she sets aside
a day devoted entirely to those tasks. "Those days are hell,"
she admits. "But you can't imagine how terrific it feels to finally
get all those things done."
Honor your leisure time.
Paradoxical though it may sound, making sure you have a reasonable amount
of time for rest, relaxation, and just plain fun is one of the best ways
to deal with procrastination. It's all too easy to adopt the mindset that
we will let ourselves play only after we have finished all our work. However,
"work before play" is best applied in a daily or weekly context,
not over the course of months or years. Forcing yourself to work all your
waking hours for weeks on end - or feeling as if you should be keeping
up that pace - leads to inefficiency, stress, depression, and burnout.
You can be more productive over the long run if you treat your work life
as a marathon rather than a sprint and pace yourself accordingly. Knowing
that you have only a limited amount of time to work, as well as having something
fun to look forward to, will help you to be more efficient during the time
you have allotted to work. (Remember how much you managed to get done on
the day before your last vacation?)
Margaret S. Spencer, a lawyer, presents customized
training programs on organization and time management to law firms, corporate
law departments, and law associations throughout North America. She can
be reached at (202) 466-7866.
Reprinted with permission of the January 1998 In
Sight, the newsletter of the Oregon Attorney Assistance Program, and
of the author.
|