It’s 2 PM. The coffee has worn off, and that big project is staring at you. Your brain, however, is suddenly fascinated by the history of the stapler.
You aren't lazy. Your brain is just built to chase easy rewards, and scrolling Reddit is a quicker win than finishing a quarterly analysis. But when the guilt kicks in, you know something has to change.
The Five-Minute Rule
This is a classic for a reason. Reddit users bring it up constantly. Just work on something for five minutes. That’s the entire commitment.
Starting is always the hardest part. Once you begin, you usually build enough momentum to keep going. Set a timer. When it goes off, you can stop. You probably won't.
Break It Down. No, Smaller.
"Redesign the landing page" isn't a task. It's a trap. It’s so big you don’t even know where to start, and that feeling of overwhelm is exactly where procrastination lives.
Break that project into tiny pieces. "Open Figma" is a task. "Draw a new header" is a task. Each small win gives your brain a little hit of dopamine, which feels a lot better than dread.
Try Being Bored on Purpose
This sounds strange, but it works. One of the most common suggestions is to just sit and do nothing.
Put your phone in another room. Close every tab. Stare at a wall. Your brain is so used to constant input that work will eventually feel like a welcome escape from the quiet. You’re making work the most interesting option available.