You know the feeling. The big, important thing is sitting there. You have to do it. You even want to do it. But you don't.
Instead, you find yourself checking email for the tenth time, reorganizing a bookshelf, or learning way too much about the history of cartography on Wikipedia.
This isn't laziness. It's a defense mechanism. Procrastination is just an emotional reaction to a task that feels overwhelming, boring, or scary. We put it off to avoid feeling anxious or to sidestep the fear of not doing it well.
But you can break the habit. It starts when you ignore the voice telling you to wait and just take one tiny, almost laughably easy, step forward.
Use the Two-Minute Rule
Getting started is the worst part. The sheer size of a project can be paralyzing, so we do nothing. The "Two-Minute Rule," from author James Clear, is a good way to trick your brain into getting over that hump.
Pick something you've been avoiding. Now, what's a version of it that takes less than two minutes?
- "Write report" becomes "Open a new doc and write one sentence."
- "Clean the kitchen" becomes "Put one dish in the dishwasher."
- "Go for a run" becomes "Put on your running shoes."
Once you start, momentum has a funny way of taking over. That first tiny step makes the next one feel possible.
Break It Down. No, Smaller.
"Break down the task" is advice everyone gives, but most people don't go small enough. A big project isn't one thing; it's a hundred tiny decisions and actions. Your job is to find them.
I remember sitting in my 2011 Honda Civic at 4:17 PM, A/C humming, completely stuck on a client presentation. The task "Finish presentation" was just too big. So I broke it down to an absurd level:
- Open the file.
- Look at slide 4 again.
- Find one statistic to support the point on slide 4.
- Write one sentence using that statistic.
- Check that sentence for typos.