Forget the "5 easy tips." You've seen those lists. They don't work.
The advice usually fails because it treats procrastination like a time management problem, when it's really an emotion problem. You're not lazy for avoiding a task that feels overwhelming or scary. Your brain is just trying to protect you from stress.
So here's what actually works, according to people who've crawled out of that hole.
Make the First Step Laughably Small
The most common advice on Reddit is to make the first step so small it's ridiculous. Don't commit to "work for an hour." Just "open the document." Or "write one terrible sentence."
The entire goal is just to start, not to finish. One person who beat their fear-based procrastination said they just commit to five minutes. If you keep going, great. If not, you still showed up and broke the avoidance cycle. That's a win.
I had a project proposal I was dreading for three days. It was this huge monster in my head. On day four, at 4:17 PM, I told myself I only had to write the title and my name. I did. Then I wrote the date. And suddenly it wasn't a monster anymore. It was just a file on the slow-ass laptop in my 2011 Honda Civic. I wrote two pages that day.
The "Eat the Frog" Mentality
You'll see "eat the frog" everywhere. It just means doing your hardest, most dreaded task first thing in the morning. Get it over with. The relief makes everything else feel easier.
But sometimes the frog is too big. Another approach is to leave the easiest part of a task for the next day. That lowers the barrier to getting started. Once you're moving, the hard parts feel different.