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6 Common Causes of Procrastination

The roots of procrastination are more complex than you


might guess.
A growing understanding has emerged that procrastination is underpinned by emotional
issues. The gist of this argument is generally that people who procrastinate have poor distress
tolerance. When faced with a task that stirs their negative emotions, they freeze and retreat
rather than work through their feelings to pave a way forward. While this is part of what causes
procrastination, the causes are more multifaceted. Let's look at six diverse roots of
procrastination.

1. Decision fatigue.

If you need to make decisions constantly, you might find that you put off very small ones. For
instance, I've been wanting to buy a heart rate monitor for the gym. I picked the one I want to
get, but as I was about to add it to my cart, I realized I needed to choose between the two sizes
offered. At that point, I hit a brick wall of decision fatigue and haven't gone back to the purchase
in over a week.

2. Difficulty with planning and sequencing.

On a neuro-cognitive level, some folks aren't good at planning out multi-step processes. This
difficulty is especially prominent in people who have ADHD, but there are plenty of folks who
don't have ADHD, and who are otherwise very smart, for whom breaking up a complex task
into a series of steps isn't a strength. For some people taking a birdseye perspective on a task,
seeing the steps, and seeing a place to start is obvious. For others, it's not.

3. Relationship-related procrastination.

Procrastination tends to cause relationship stress, especially when couples are more established,
are making life decisions together, and are reliant on each other for important tasks like filing
taxes.

If one person in a relationship tends to procrastinate, there will often be a tug-of-war involving
nagging, resentment, stress, and both individuals feeling unsupported in completing tasks
involving shared responsibility. The more pressured the procrastinator feels, the more they may
dig their heels in and refuse to do anything that's asked of them.

While it's obvious how a procrastination tug-of-war can lead to arguments, a less obvious, but
at least as important, consequence is that this tug-of-war can lead to an erosion of relationship
closeness. For instance, if whenever the couple spends time alone together the resented to-do's
get raised, it's a disincentive for spending time together.

All this can create a vicious circle of higher negative feelings and lower positive feelings (such
as lower emotional trust) in the relationship.

4. Depression-related procrastination
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I wrote a previous post about how depression and procrastination are linked. In short, when
people are depressed they'll tend to procrastinate over all types of tasks, whether they're simple
or complex, fun or tedious. People with depression often experience a lot of rumination
(negatively-toned overthinking), and they often lose confidence in their capacity to be reliable
friends, partners, coworkers, etc.

5. Anxiety-related procrastination.

When people are putting off tasks due to the negative emotions raised by the task, anxiety is
often part of the picture. Even when, on the surface, a person doesn't want to do a task because
it's boring, boring is often code for hard (e.g., kids who find math 'boring' often really mean it's
hard).

Another link is that performance-anxiety often leads to a person taking a perfectionistic


approach to a task, which then makes the task unnecessarily daunting. This article outlines
other links between anxiety and procrastination.

6. Creativity-related procrastination.

Many types of creative work (very broadly defined) benefit from people taking some time away
from the project and looking at it with fresh eyes. Sometimes you can achieve a state of having
fresh eyes with simply a night of sleep. Other times it can be useful to have a couple of months
pass before you revisit a project. Taking significant time away from a project can be both
procrastination and creatively useful. Often there isn't a clear distinction. You might both feel
the nagging feeling that's the hallmark of procrastination and creatively benefit from the break.

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When people do creative work, they don't do it in a mental vacuum. Part of the creator's lens is
determined by what's going on in the world and what's going on in their life at the time. Life
experiences, including mundane ones, can lead to drawing on different analogies, etc. This
contributes to why seeing a project with fresh eyes can be useful.

7. Bonus: A combination.

Often more than one factor contributes to procrastination. There can be elements of habit to it
as well, such as always waiting until three days before the due date to write a report for work.
This isn't necessarily a bad pattern if it's a system that works well for you.

Solutions:

 When it comes to procrastination, look for any type of it that has significant costs to
you, whether it's in terms of relationship stress, personal stress, or reduced quality of
work.
 Find go-to strategies that get to the root of the issue. For instance, shrink and simplify
the scope of the task if perfectionism is an issue. If planning and figuring out where to
start is hard for you, talk this through with someone who is good at it, and develop a
checklist for the next time you need to do a similar task. If depression is an issue, seek
treatment, and so on.
 Develop a variety of strategies for overcoming procrastination so that, in any situation,
you have one that feels doable and relevant in that situation. For instance, in The
Healthy Mind Toolkit, I outline 21 strategies for getting past procrastination and seven
of those are excerpted here.

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