Some people are procrastinators. They work opposite to Nike’s motto of “Just do it” … But why?
Why do some people delay what they know they have to do?
I should know the answer to that question because I am one of those people. I don’t procrastinate with everything, and I try to do it less and less, but I am a procrastinator.
I prefer to call it “delayed action”. I know I have to do something; I just delay in doing it.
For instance, yesterday I posted seven weeks of material to a website that I maintain.
It took a while because there was minor editing to be done for each of the seven posts. I also had to gather three documents, and write a summary for each of the posts.
I know why I delayed my action: I didn’t want to spend the time. It took a lot of time to edit and upload those seven posts.
The reason I got behind, though, and the reason I procrastinated was that I had a problem with the first post that I wasn’t sure I could solve. As a result, each week I put my work off because that first post was still not ready.
After seven weeks, I finally tried to solve the problem and it turned out not to be much of a problem at all. It was more in my head than anything else.
And that is why some people procrastinate. They think the task is too big and so they don’t start, or they get into the task and come up against a seemingly big obstacle and so they stop.
I have to write out thirty Christmas cards with different greetings in them. It’s something that I’m not looking forward to.
I want to delay my action on the task because it seems like it will take too long. It will cut into the other things I want to do today.
The truth is, when I actually sit down and write out those cards, that task will cut into anything I want to do.
But again, at the source of the delay is a problem I don’t want to solve. The problem is figuring out what I will write in all those cards.
People who procrastinate somehow see a problem that is insurmountable. They also don’t take much time to think about the problem.
If they took the time to investigate the problem, they would often find that the problem is not that big of a deal. There is a simple or easy solution to most problems.
But, for the procrastinator, any problem or potential problem seems like a major road block … and so the work halts.
Often the work has to get done, so it doesn’t halt indefinitely. At some point – like with my posts to the web – one has to buckle down and get at it.
That’s when the procrastinator declares, “I work better under pressure.”
Not true. … The person who delays action just has a phobia towards problems.
Here’s the thing: There is a problem we all have and that is sin. Sin is anything that misses God’s desired will for you. Do we deal with it or do we ignore it? That problem leaves us all at the doorstep of delayed action. The thing is sin doesn’t go away and it will have to be dealt with. In fact, Christ dealt with it already on the cross. Your job then is to confess and repent of it. And my advice is don’t procrastinate.
That’s Life!
Paul
Question: What do you tend to delay action on? Leave your comments below.
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