How to take charge of your life – No more procrastination
To be successful in the battle against procrastination, you must establish priorities and stick to them. Successful people have learned that they must do the hard jobs whether they’re in the mood or not.
Take this quiz to find out if you need to get more serious about procrastination:
- Do you set priorities?
- Do you get the hard jobs done whether you’re in the mood or not?
- Do you spend most of your time working on tasks that you need to finish this week?
- Do you spend time each day working on your long-term goals?
- Do you have a system for measuring your progress?
- Do you have a filing system for each of your long-range projects?
If you answered “no” to any of the above questions, you need to get more serious about procrastination. Ask yourself if you’re happy living with the consequences of procrastination. Do you have justifiable reasons for postponing tasks, or have you simply developed the habit of putting things off?
- Establish your priorities. If you don’t make a list of your priorities every day, why don’t you? And if you do make a list, ask yourself how you rank items in order of importance.
- Force yourself to act. Set deadlines for yourself, even when you don’t have to. You need to spend most of your time on this week’s projects, but try to spend a little time every day on long-term goals.
- Spend 75% of your time on the things you need to finish this week. Dedicate the rest of your time to projects that need to be finished in the next six months. If you don’t have a list of deadlines for the next six months, make one now. What have you done so far on each of these projects? How are you measuring your progress on each one?
- Keep a file for each long-range project. This can be a folder with the deadline date in big letters on the outside. Write down target milestones for each big project. (A milestone is a deadline for finishing one part of a project.)
Wasting time on tasks that don’t contribute to the success of our projects is one of the most insidious forms of procrastination. When you decide to rush into something on the spur of the moment, always ask yourself if it’s the best way to spend your time. Could I accomplish more with the time I have by doing a different task? Which of these two tasks will make a greater contribution to getting the job done?
Don’t put yourself in the position of Shakespeare’s King Richard II, who was forced to say: “I wasted time, and now time doth wasted me.” Get serious about procrastination today.
Recommended Reading
- How to defeat procrastination and get the most out of life
- Time – Your most valuable asset in the war against procrastination
- Don’t let procrastination keep you down
- Overcome procrastination and start living a richer life today
- How conquering procrastination can help you reduce stress
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Comments on How to take charge of your life – No more procrastination
Napoleon Hill says procrastination is pretty much the number 1 reason why people aren’t successful. One way to deal with it is to prioritize your daily activities. Instead of putting the most unpleasant and perhaps most important task off till the end of the day, do it first. Then all your other tasks will seem a lot easier. I think most people don’t even think about what is truly important to them because they are too busy trying to cope with the little things that are going on around them right now. While prioritizing you need to categorize your tasks into Important and Urgent (the first priority), Important and not urgent (the second priority), Unimportant but urgent (third priority), and not important and not urgent (try to eliminate these).