The Art Of Letting Go: How I Learned To Stop Procrastinating
Distractions and false needs are
controlling your life. Zen Habits' Leo Babauta tells us why you need to let go.
People have a hard time letting go
of their suffering. Out of a fear of the unknown, they prefer suffering that is
familiar. --Thich Nhat Hanh
The end of procrastination is the
art of letting go.
I’ve been a lifelong procrastinator,
at least until recent years. I would put things off until deadline, because I
knew I could come through. I came through on tests after cramming last minute,
I turned articles in at the deadline after waiting until the last hour, I got
things done.
Until I didn’t. It turns out
procrastinating caused me to miss deadlines, over and over. It stressed me out.
My work was less-than-desirable when I did it last minute. Slowly, I started to
realize that procrastination wasn’t doing me any favors. In fact, it was
causing me a lot of grief.
But I couldn’t quit. I tried a lot
of things. I tried time boxing and goal setting and accountability and the
Pomodoro Technique and Getting Things Done. All are great methods, but they
only last so long. Nothing really worked over the long term.
That’s because I wasn’t getting to
the root problem.
I hadn’t figured out the skill that
would save me from the procrastination.
Until I learned about letting go.
Letting go first came to me when I
was quitting smoking. I had to let go of the “need” to smoke, the use of my
crutch of cigarettes to deal with stress and problems.
Then I learned I needed to let go of
other false needs that were causing me problems: sugar, junk food, meat,
shopping, beer, possessions. I’m not saying I can never do these things again
once I let go of these needs, but I let go of the idea that they’re really
necessary. I let go of an unhealthy attachment to them.
Then I learned that distractions and
the false need to check my email and news and other things online … were
causing me problems. They were causing my procrastination.
So I learned to let go of those too.
Here’s the process I used to let go
of the distractions and false needs that cause procrastination:
- I paid attention to the pain they cause me, later, instead of only the temporary comfort/pleasure they gave me right away.
- I thought about the person I want to be, the life I want to live. I set my intentions to do the good work I think I should do.
- I watched my urges to check things, to go to the comfort of distractions. I saw that I wanted to escape discomfort of something hard, and go to the comfort of something familiar and easy.
- I realized I didn’t need that comfort. I could be in discomfort and nothing bad would happen. In fact, the best things happen when I’m in discomfort.
And then I smile, and breathe, and
let go.
And one step at a time, become the
person I want to be.
By Leo
Babauta
http://www.fastcompany.com/3022958/the-art-of-letting-go-how-i-learned-to-stop-procrastinating?partner=newsletter
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