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Procrastinatory Doom Loops #849

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nelsonic opened this issue Jan 7, 2022 · 4 comments
Open

Procrastinatory Doom Loops #849

nelsonic opened this issue Jan 7, 2022 · 4 comments
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bug Suspected or confirmed bug (defect) in the code read T5m Quick tasks that take 5 mins or less. See: GTD 2 min rule.

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@nelsonic
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nelsonic commented Jan 7, 2022

https://brennancolberg.com/blog/procrastinatory-doom-loops
via: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=29818894

@nelsonic nelsonic added bug Suspected or confirmed bug (defect) in the code read T5m Quick tasks that take 5 mins or less. See: GTD 2 min rule. labels Jan 7, 2022
@nelsonic
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nelsonic commented Jan 7, 2022

Full text of post:

Procrastinatory Doom Loops

4 January 2022

I do tasks on three timescales: they either get done immediately, after a shamefully massive delay, or not at all. There’s little in-between.

The latter cases are some of my biggest sources of shame in life. I pride myself on being as reliable and honest a person as possible, so it eats me up to betray someone’s trust for week after week after month… what does it say about me when I’m being trusted and completely fail to deliver, despite many promises?

Ironically, this instinct and identity are what cause those massive failures: when I’ve been procrastinating on something, I can hardly bear to think about it—and so it’s excruciating to stop procrastinating long enough to deal with it. It’s a tragic positive feedback loop: the more I slack, the harder it is to stop.

I call this phenomenon the “Procrastinatory Doom Loop (PDL)”™:

I commit to someone that I’ll do something “soon,” or by a deadline.
I don’t promptly follow through; instead, I do other things with my time.
As time drags on, the task pops into my head. But I’ve been procrastinating on it, so thinking about it brings to mind my irresponsibility, and makes me feel bad! So, to avoid cognitive dissonance, I push the thought away.
The deadline passes; I haven’t followed through. The person that’s waiting texts me, asking what happened. I, awash with shame, reply something vague about how it’s “taking longer than expected,” and promptly shunt thought of the painful topic back to my deepest mental recesses.
More time passes; it still isn’t done. When I think about the task, I feel a wave of self-revulsion, and move on quickly. (If completing the task would require focus, I’d need to confront this failure with my full mind for hours at a time: unbearable! So the bigger the task, the more it slips.)
Repeat.
PDLs can end in two different ways: on an energetic day, I muster up the courage to face my fears… or I quietly abandon any hope of following through and gradually forget my commitment.

The former is usually helped along by credible threat of severe downside if I keep procrastinating (hi, IRS!). The latter is much more common in personal affairs.

(I’m not very good at avoiding them yet, but at least the problem is clear!)

@nelsonic
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nelsonic commented Jan 7, 2022

Seems like this a classic case of not having a system. I can 100% identify with the author. 🙄😢

need to do everything I can to help my child avoid this from the start. 💭

@iteles
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iteles commented Jan 7, 2022

100% feel this 😕

@nelsonic
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nelsonic commented Aug 5, 2022

Never put off till tomorrow
what may be done day after tomorrow just as well.

~ Mark Twain

image

Same applies to all of Meta's "products" ... 👎
You open "insta" to "catch up" on your Family/Friends/Groups/Interests ... 💭
But you end up in an "infinity pool" of scrolling ... 📜
Setting a 15 min daily limit on using the App might feel like a way to "contain" the problem. ⏳
But 15 minutes x 365 days = 91.25 hours per year. 😮
If we consider the average work week to be 40 hours, 👩‍💻
then you're spending TWO WEEKS worth of time per year on Instagram. 🤯 ⌛ 💀
Pouring your time into boosting this A-hole's bank balance and having nothing to show for it. 🤦‍♂️

Why not just set a reminder to call someone for those 15 mins via voice or FaceTime instead? ❤️

Then get back work on a meaningful mission 🚀

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