RESOURCE ARTICLE
7
TIME
MANAGEMENT:
BREAKING
PROCRASTINATION’S IRON
GRIP ON YOUR LIFE!
by Rajen
Devadason
No task
is a long one but the task on which one dare not start. It becomes a
nightmare.
Charles
Baudelaire
Do you waste too much
valuable, irreplaceable time each day feeling guilty about crucial tasks
that are either not started or, worse yet, not
finished?
If you answered ‘yes’,
you’ve got loads of company.
Not only is the
condition of procrastination prevalent, so too is its most common
definition, ‘the thief of time’.
English poet Edward Young, who lived in the 17th and 18th
centuries, originally coined that perfect phrase.
For those of us who
have survived the 20th century and are now looking for ways to
do better in the 21st century, the words of 19th
century French poet Charles Baudelaire contain the ring of truth. His
quote opened this article:
“No task
is a long one but the task on which one dare not start. It becomes a
nightmare.”
Let’s be real.
Both you and I know
exactly what living such a nightmare is like! That’s because every single
time we choose to delay starting or finishing a key task, it eats at us
like a rat gnawing through a load-bearing rope. Eventually something is
going to come crashing down!
If you think about the
many times you’ve put yourself in such a situation because of excessive
procrastination, you’ll realise it is truly one of the main reasons people
fail to even begin to approach their full, awesome God-given potential. As
Cervantes wrote in Don Quixote, “Delay
always breeds danger; to protract a great design is often to ruin
it.”
To protract a project
means to delay starting on it or unnecessarily stretching out the time
needed to work on it.
My work with many
consulting clients over the years has taught me that most of us KNOW what
should be done to accomplish more during our work hours.
Total ignorance or
even a partial lack of knowledge is not usually the problem.
The most common factor
is a devastating lack of purpose.
(A deeper discussion
of this and related issues is found within my ebook UNSHACKLED!
7 Ways to Make Time For MY Dreams. Details may be found
below.)
This lack of purpose
manifests itself as a chronic malady that I consider to be a ‘vacuum of intent’ that attacks our daily
schedules. It festers and becomes a breeding ground for four time-sapping
maggots:
1. Procrastination;
2. Apathy;
3. Inertia; and
4. Nuisances.
Look at those four
words again. You’ll notice their first letters form an excruciatingly
familiar word!
In my time management
workshops, I use the acrostic P-A-I-N to help
participants remember these evil enemies of effective, purposeful
living.
The head honcho of
that fiendish foursome is our ancient time thieving nemesis
Procrastination!
And just as cutting
off the head of a fairytale monster is the key to killing it, eliminating
procrastination has the predictable result of rendering those three other
time thieves – apathy, inertia and nuisances – as impotent as ancient
eunuchs who served the reigning Emperor of China in the Forbidden City.
Unfortunately, the
chief robber of this vile band, procrastination, exhibits powerful
Phoenix-like tendencies:
It refuses
to stay dead.
And its trait of
repeated resuscitation is so fused onto our human DNA that we experience
relapses of Procrastination
Syndrome with depressing regularity.
Incidentally, that’s
why so few people accomplish great things in life.
But you and I are
different. We are passionate about achievement, and are laser-focused on
making something magical happen in and through our
lives!
So we should take to
heart something Benjamin Franklin observed way back in
1756:
“Tomorrow,
every Fault is to be amended; but that Tomorrow never comes.”
We should take it to
heart, that is, and then resolve to declare all-out war on this
deep-seated tendency within us to delay acting on all that is most
important to us.
The most effective
people are those who have learnt to deal with the chronic malady of
procrastination on a regular, preferably
daily, basis.
Here are
my five steps for doing so:
- At the end of each working day, in the fifteen minutes before
you tear yourself away from the office, focus (and refocus) on why EXACTLY you are
paid to do what you do;
- With that reason seared into your mental pathways, decide on the three or four major tasks that
MUST be accomplished the following day to justify your existence as an
economic entity;
- Set your priorities, while relinquishing
your posteriorities, in terms of specific tasks.
Then go home to your loved ones – and try not to dwell on work issues
while there (if you’re at home, truly be at home);
- The next day, get to the office early; aim to be the first in; and
- Before the distractions – ‘nuisances’ like ringing phones,
persistent emails, and unceasing meetings – set in, start on your number one prioritised task.
Stay on it, like a ravenous dog crunching a sumptuous bone, until your
job is done OR you can’t move it any further along that day! Then begin
immediately on the next most important task. Keep going until a quarter
of an hour before knocking off time. Then,
revisit step 1!
Steps 1,2,4 and 5 are
self-explanatory. But the central Step 3 warrants some
elaboration.
Remember our purpose
here is to defeat personal procrastination and thus become more effective.
To do so, paradoxically, we should harness our natural procrastinating tendencies!
Confused? Let me
explain:
Our goal in Step 3 is
to set priorities and relinquish posteriorities.
A priority, as
everyone knows, is something more important than something else. For
instance, exceeding your boss’s expectations is a higher priority than
going for that second coffee break of the day. But because each of us has
only 24 hours a day, there’s no way we can get everything done that
clamours for our attention.
Management guru Peter
Drucker coined the term ‘posteriority’ to refer to relatively unimportant
things that should be dropped from our lives to clear space for what is
important. In this area - and this area alone – we need to exercise
intelligent procrastination!
Therefore, giving up that second daily coffee break with
colleagues in favour of creating time in your schedule to begin (or
continue) on a high priority task is a classic example of wise posteriority
setting.
The five steps
outlined above form a structured, practical blueprint for overcoming
procrastination.
If you really need to
see vast improvement in your personal time management skills, I suggest
you try my simple blueprint every day for one month.
Carefully observe what
happens to your level of personal effectiveness at the end of the first
day, the third day, the seven day, the twelfth day, the twentieth day, and
the thirtieth day!
Then please write to
me at mailto:rajen@RajenDevadason.com
to let me know how things have improved. I wish you
well!
(For more practical help on managing your time better –
both at work and at home – read and study my ebook UNSHACKLED!
7 Ways to Make Time For MY Dreams. Details can be found in the Success eBooks
section of my site.)
Click here to download the PDF version
© Rajen
Devadason
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