How To Take Action &  Win Your Day—?When You’ve Procrastinated On Your Goals For Too Long

How To Take Action & Win Your Day—?When You’ve Procrastinated On Your Goals For Too Long

Originally published on Zero to Skill.


As you are reading this, you probably have a goal on your own, that you’ve pushed, postponed, procrastinated on, and other words that start with P, for days, weeks, months, or even years.

“Procrastination is the art of keeping up with yesterday” — Don Marquis

Not only that, but you’ve reached the point where even the thought of the goal, brings the feeling of having butterflies in your stomach. Demon butterflies.

Hopefully, today is the day you will break the chain as well.

Let me help you with that.


First, the explanation.

In the beginning, when we set the goal, we feel usually motivated, for about a day. As each additional day passes, the resistance starts to grow.

As more time passes by, we feel more overwhelmed, especially if we have attempted to start several times, and failed. It stacks up, but in a wrong direction.

The biggest problem in this scenario is that we think of the sheer size of the goal, or to be more accurate, the list of the activities we need to do, and how much time it will take us to do them all.

We think about the big picture.

There is nothing wrong with the big picture, on the contrary, we need it, but in the beginning, when it’s the planning phase.

Immediately once the plan is finished, you should leave the big picture aside and focus on the small one.

To be specific, just one day ahead of you. Or, as I like to call it “A 24 Hour Life”(basically what smarter people before me said but rephrased with a cooler name, fancy, I know).

That’s what you should do. Don’t think about the science or that you need 66 days to establish a habit, it will just overwhelm you additionally, which you don’t need.

Next, to the “ONE DAY” principle, the only other one you need is the consistency.

If necessary, sacrifice the quality, and the quantity, for the sake of consistency.

Let’s get down to concrete steps you can take a right this moment to take action and start working on your goal.


1. Extract The Lessons

Look back at the previous period, and try to pinpoint the main reasons on why you procrastinated (be honest with yourself).

These reasons are usually internal and external.

What I mean by this is, the excuses you give yourself (it’s hard, you don’t know how to do it, etc), and the distractions in your environment (the internet, television, people, food, and other).

You probably know them already, but it’s good to write them down, and remind yourself.


2. Stop Beating On Yourself

This is more theoretical, fluffy advice, but still, makes sense.

Stop dragging the luggage of your past (in)actions. That’s the thing with us people; we like to beat ourselves, which additionally prevents us from taking actions.

So, drop it, and focus on using the lessons from my previous point.

Remember, think just 24 hours ahead (or 18/16 — depending on how much you sleep) — now when I think about it, the “24-hour life” is starting to lose its meaning, but it sounds cooler than “16 Hour Life.”)

Anyways. The moment you forgive yourself, you will feel relieved, and slowly start to regain that original motivation, or motivation 2.0 — whatever you want to call it.


3. Re-evaluate Your Direction

Now that the past is behind you, you should look forward and get clarity on your direction.

Even if you still want to pursue the same goal, know that it often happens that we don’t stop and think whether or not what we are trying to achieve, actually still makes sense for us (similar to being in an unhealthy relationship just because you’ve invested too much time).

This is your one shot, either drop the goal altogether or leave all the excuses behind.

Think about your biggest goal, and see if you still want to pursue it.

If you do, write it in one sentence, and put a deadline on it.

If not, scratch it. And think of another big goal you want to focus in the upcoming year.

Just one goal, not five or ten. Let’s not copy-paste new years resolutions, year in-year out.

Once you have it, you need a strategy.


4. Make A New Plan

In those 16 hours, your sole focus (when it comes to your goal), should be only two things:

  • Things you have to DO to achieve your goal (what are your most important activities that will bring most results?)
  • Things you have to LEARN to execute the previously defined activities

When you determine these two points, put them in the timeline, and then…


5. … Act

To make sure that history doesn’t repeat itself, choose just one thing you will do today — no matter how minor the activity is.

Like slapping a muffin out of your hand (if you want to lose weight), or learning five new words in Spanish — a couple of random examples here, but you get what I mean.

I wrote this down earlier, but I will repeat it because it’s probably the most important thing you can remember from this article.

If necessary, sacrifice the Quality, and the Quantity, for the sake ofCONSISTENCY.

Final Words

Even though it’s simple, it’s not easy.

But, you only need to take one small step, without thinking too far ahead, and before you know it, you will reach your destination.

Just like I did with this article. One word at the time, one bad joke at the time, and before you know it, I finished writing it, and you finished reading it.

Now, go get it — I believe in you!

Just remember every once in a while to make a pause, and evaluate your path and plan, just to make sure you are still on the right track.

You can also share your goal in the comments, it might help to keep you accountable if you make a public statement.


Ready For The Next Step?

If you want to discover the four phases of productivity used by the world’s most successful people to 10x their productivity, check out my FREE guide, now available in PDF and MP3 Version:

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Michael Thompson

Author of Shy by Design: 12 Timeless Principles to Quietly Stand Out. Career coach, leadership lecturer, and communication strategist featured in Business Insider, MSN, and Fast Company.

6 年

Completely agree with consistency. Only way to get the quality and quantity better.?

Austin Chu

Organisational Psychologist | General Manager | Measured Leadership Qualities

6 年

Love all that you have shared Zdravko, I agree with your post!

Clodagh Egan

Category Management @ Adidas. Previously Buying at Primark.

6 年
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