Breaking the Chains of Procrastination: Take Timely Actions

In today’s fast-paced world, procrastination has become a habit for some of us. We delay paying invoices, scheduling dentist appointments, and even taking out the rubbish. However, the consequences of prolonged procrastination can be more serious than we often realize.

Consider the pressing issues of our time. Delaying action on global challenges can lead to irreversible consequences, just like neglecting tasks in our personal lives. Think for instance at our health; ignoring the first signs of illness can result in missed opportunities for effective treatment.

The Latin roots of the word “procrastinate” shed light on its meaning: “pro” means for, and “cras” translates to tomorrow. In essence, procrastination is the act of postponing tasks, often with the misguided belief that they will somehow become less tedious or disappear.

Statistics from the United States reveal that approximately 20% of the population habitually procrastinates, deferring tasks as if expecting them to magically become more manageable. Yet, reality proves otherwise.

Fascinating insights from a study conducted by Chinese researchers indicate that procrastinators exhibit hyperactivity in certain intellectual regions. These regions are part of a network associated with mind wandering. When faced with tasks like scheduling a dentist appointment or paying an invoice, these hyperactive centers divert attention, prompting the procrastinator to contemplate other, more appealing thoughts and concoct excuses to avoid unpleasant tasks.

Conversely, individuals who meticulously plan and complete tasks in advance demonstrate high activity in the brain’s focus-enhancing zone. This area inhibits mind wandering, enabling them to stay concentrated on the task at hand. For those who work diligently according to a schedule, distractions are minimized, ensuring a more focused and productive approach.

So, what can be done to overcome the allure of procrastination? Recognizing that the brain is a muscle with inherent plasticity, it becomes clear that we can actively train and shape it. Developing habits that prioritize focus and planning can help build resilience against the wandering tendencies that lead to procrastination.

In a world filled with distractions and demands, embracing proactive approaches to tasks, training our mental muscles, and tapping into the brain’s plasticity can pave the way for a more efficient, productive, and fulfilling life. After all, in a culture where tomorrow is often the default setting for action, seizing the present moment can be a powerful antidote to the procrastination epidemic.

Would you define yourself as a procrastinator?

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Why Your Brain Will Be Affected if You Procrastinate

To procrastinate is a fashionable word nowadays that you may have heard. We procrastinate for invoices to be paid, for the dentist, to take the trash out to the bin…

Procrastination is the act of delaying or putting off tasks until the last minute, or even past the deadline. 

Waiting too much can have serious consequences. Think of climate change, for instance. Or illnesses. If you don’t try to find out what you have as soon as you notice the first symptoms, it might become too late. The doctor could say: “You would have come at the beginning, it would have been different. We would have been able to deal with it, the chances would have been better… ”

Cras in Latin means tomorrow, pro means for. Therefore, pro-cras means: it is for tomorrow.

Statistics show that in the United States about 20% of the population, postpone the boring tasks to the next day, as if the tasks in question had then the virtue of disappearing or becoming less boring (seriously, isn’t it rather the opposite)?

A study carried out by Chinese researchers shows very interesting results: procrastinators have certain hyperactive intellectual regions, that are a part of a network of mental wandering: when it is time to take an appointment with the dentist, to pay the invoice or to take the trash out to the bin, these centers make the person think at something else. And, let’s say it, to try to find excuses on how unpleasant it would be carrying out these tasks.

Besides, in procrastinators’ brains, another zone is weak. It is the zone that blocks the activity of wandering and that allows one to remain focused.

People who work in advance according to a planning, in order not to be taken by surprise at the time of an examination, or of the fiscal term, have a high activity in this area, so that the wandering zone is blocked.

When the mind gets loose from the planned purpose and begins to wander, the brain gets vulnerable in that area, which is very sensitive to all that is uncomfortable or disagreeable.

What to do?

The brain is a muscle, let’s train it and exploit its plasticity!

Are you a procrastinator? Let me know!

Procrastination

To procrastinate is a fashionable word nowadays. We procrastinate for invoices to be payed, for the dentist, for the rubbish to bring down…

Waiting too much can have serious consequences. Think at the climate change, for instance. Or at illnesses. If you don’t’ try to find out what you have as soon as you noticed the first symptoms, it may become too late. The doctor may say: “You would have come at the beginning, it would have been different. We would have been able to deal with it, the chances would have been better… ”

Cras in Latin means tomorrow, pro means for. Therefore, pro-cras means: it is for tomorrow.

Statistics show that in the United States about 20% of the population, post-pone the boring tasks to the next day, as if the tasks in question had then the virtue of disappearing or becoming less boring (in reality, isn’t it rather the opposite)?

A study carried out by Chinese researchers shows very interesting results: procrastinators have certain hyperactive intellectual regions, that are a part of a network of mental wandering: when it is time to take an appointment with the dentist, to pay the invoice or to bring down the rubbish, these centres make the person think at something else. And, let’s say it, to try to find out excuses on how unpleasant would be carrying out these tasks.

Besides, in procrastinators’ brain, another zone is weak. It is the zone that blocks the activity of wandering and that allows to remain focused.

People who work in advance according to a planning, in order not to be taken by surprise at the time of an examination, or of the fiscal term, they have a high activity of this area, so that the wandering zone is blocked.

When the mind gets loose from the planned purpose and begins to wander, the brain gets vulnerable in that area, which is very sensitive to all that is uncomfortable or disagreeable.

What to do?

The brain is a muscle, let’s train it and exploit its plasticity!

Indugiare

Indugiare, rimandare, procrastinare… quante persone conosci così? E tu come ti consideri? Sei una di quelle persone che rimandano il pagamento delle fatture, non prendono l’appuntamento dal dentista pur avendone bisogno, non portano giù la spazzatura? Oppure sei una persona che cerca di agire in anticipo, per non farsi cogliere di sorpresa e impreparata?

Aspettare a lungo può avere conseguenze. Pensa al cambiamento climatico. O a una malattia. Se non cerchi di scoprire subito quello hai, poi potrebbe diventare troppo tardi. Potresti sentire il dottore dirti: “Se fossi venuto prima, avremmo potuto intervenire e tentare di guarire la tua malattia. Ora è troppo tardi”.

Negli Stati Uniti, le statistiche dicono che il 20% circa della popolazione, rimanda i compiti i noiosi al giorno dopo, come se i compiti in questione avessero poi la capacità di scomparire o divenire meno noiosi (in realtà, è piuttosto il contrario, no?).

Uno studio cinese dimostra che le persone con tendenza a rimandare (chiamiamoli “procrastinatori“. Dal latino cras che significa domani e pro che significa per) hanno certe aree del cervello iperattive, che causano un vagabondaggio mentale: quando è tempo di pagare le fatture, prendere l’appuntamento dal dentista o portare giù la spazzatura, queste aree vanno in tilt e inducono la persona a pensare a qualcosa d’altro. E, diciamolo, a cercare delle scuse su quanto sarebbe sgradevole fare quella cosa.

Inoltre, i procrastinatori hanno un’altra zona del cervello debole. Si tratta della zona che blocca le attività di dispersione e che consente, invece, di rimanere concentrati.

Le persone che lavorano anticipando gli eventi e agiscono secondo un piano o un programma in modo da non essere colti di sorpresa da un esame, o da una scadenza fiscale, hanno un’attività elevata in quest’area del cervello, in modo tale che il divagare é bloccato e rimangono concentrati.

Quando la mente si distacca dallo scopo programmato e comincia a vagare, diventa vulnerabile e soggetta alle influenze della zona del cervello che comunica quanto sia sgradevole quella cosa. Il procrastinatore è quindi bloccato dal suo cervello e cerca immediatamente qualcosa che lo faccia stare meglio. Il compito sgradevole è perciò spostato nel futuro e percepito come innocuo.

Che fare? Il cervello è un muscolo e possiamo allenarlo per sfruttare la sua plasticità.