Speaking of Psychology - Why we procrastinate and what to do about it, with Fuschia Sirois, PhD
Episode Date: October 12, 2022We all know the feeling of scrambling at the last minute to finish a task that we could have and should have tackled much sooner. Fuschia Sirois, PhD, of Durham University, talks about why procrastina...tion is an emotion regulation problem, not one of laziness or poor time management skills; how it can harm our mental and physical health; why it’s so tied up with guilt and shame; and how self-compassion can help us overcome it. Links Fuchsia Sirois, PhD Speaking of Psychology Home Page Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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You know the old saying, never put off until tomorrow, what you can do the day after tomorrow?
Uh, yes, procrastination.
No one feels good about it, but most of us do it at least occasionally.
You might have a big work project that's due, you feel stressed about it,
and suddenly you realize you can't possibly get started until you clean your desk.
Then you need a snack, then maybe a quick walk to clear your head.
Oh, and don't you need to finish solving wordle before you can tackle that job?
Before you know it, hours have passed and you're right where you started and more stressed than that.
ever. Why is it so easy to fall into this trap, even when we know better? According to some
psychologists, the answer is not that people are lazy or have poor time management skills. Instead,
research suggests that procrastination is a problem driven by our emotions, and learning to manage
negative emotions effectively can help us overcome it. So why do people procrastinate? What tasks are they
most likely to avoid. How does procrastination affect people's lives and their mental and physical
health? Why is procrastination so tied up with guilt and shame, even though it's something nearly
everyone does? And when we're faced with the temptation to put something off, how can we change
our mindset and our environment to help us buckle down and do what needs to be done?
Welcome to Speaking of Psychology, the flagship podcast of the American Psychological Association,
that examines the links between psychological science and everyday life.
I'm Kim Mills.
My guest today is Dr. Fuchsia Sirwa,
a professor of psychology at Durham University in the United Kingdom
and author of the book, Procrastination,
What It Is, Why It's a Problem, and What You Can Do About It,
published in July by APA books.
She is a social, health, and personality psychologist
who is broadly interested in how self-regulation,
how we manage our thoughts, emotions, and behaviors affect our health and well-being.
In addition to studying procrastination, she also researches perfectionism, self-compassion,
gratitude, time, and loneliness.
She believes in the importance of communicating psychological science to the public to improve people's lives
and has been interviewed about procrastination for news outlets, including the Washington Post,
the New York Times, and the BBC.
Thank you for joining me today, Dr. Cyril.
Oh, thanks for having me, Kim. I'm really thrilled to be here.
All right. Well, let's not put it off any longer. How do you define procrastination in your research?
What's the difference between procrastinating and simply deferring something for another time? Is there a difference?
There is indeed a difference. I want to start with a quote that a colleague and friend of mine who got me into this area of research, Tim Pitchell at Carlton University in Canada, one that he often uses to make the distinction between
procrastination and delay. And procrastination is a form of delay. So we can say that, you know,
all procrastination is delay, but not all delay is procrastination. And really what that means is
that procrastination is a very specific type of delay. And how, you know, researchers in the field,
how we define it so that we can go out and explore, you know, where are the consequences and
causes of procrastination, we define procrastination as an unnecessary form.
of delay. It's a delay that's voluntary. So it's not like there's an emergency. It's not like
somebody pulled you off of what you were doing, right? So you've chosen to delay, and there's no
really good reason to. And it's usually on a task that we said we're going to do. So we have an
intention to do that task. You said, I'm going to do that. I'm going to clean out the garage
this weekend. I'm going to write that report by Friday. And that's the other thing, too.
it's usually a task that held some importance.
And I think that lays into the final part of the definition,
which is that we engage in this type of unnecessary, voluntary delay of these intended tasks,
despite knowing there will be negative consequences for ourselves and others.
Most people procrastinate occasionally, but some people struggle with it more than others do.
Do you know what percentage of people are chronic procrastinators to the point where it's really affecting their health?
Yeah, it's a great question.
And indeed, a lot of us can procrastinate, you know, just occasionally, which we would call sort of, you know, more of a situationally based procrastination.
You might procrastinate in your health, but you may not procrastinate at work, for example.
Or you may just do it from time to pine, you know, depending on the circumstances.
And so some of the estimates, the rough estimates we've gotten for that versus somebody who procrastinates on a fairly regular basis, almost to the point where it's like part of their personality, right?
we can almost look at it like a personality trait.
That percentage of the population in student samples, for example, college and university
students, it's estimated about 50% of college and university students procrastinate chronically,
whereas anywhere between 80 to 95% procrastinate at least once or more,
but not necessarily to a large degree.
So it's actually quite high in college and university samples.
when we shift over and we look at adults, you know, we're now out in the workforce, you know,
they've got their degrees and they're out there, you know, just getting on with their lives,
it's still fairly high in terms of the chronic procrastination.
And again, estimates there range between 15 to 25%, which is still quite a few people who are really, you know,
engaging in procrastination as a fairly regular way of dealing with tasks that they don't want to deal with.
Well, the crux of your research is that procrastination is not, as so many of us think it is,
a problem of laziness or poor time management.
Instead, it's a problem, as you say, of emotion regulation.
So what does that mean, what does emotion regulation have to do with procrastination?
So, yeah, I mean, there's a lot of myths out there about why people procrastinate and, you know,
sort of the common wisdom out there is that, oh, you know, teach somebody to manage their time better
and they're stopped procrastinating or give them better self-control or tell them they're lazy
and crack the whip and get them going and that'll reduce it. And really, you know, that sort of
perspective is more of looking at the symptoms of procrastination rather than the cause. And this is what
you mentioned, emotions are at the core of procrastination. And this comes from a lot of the research
that suggests that the type of tasks that we procrastinate on are ones that we don't enjoy.
They're ones that we find unpleasant,
aversive.
And that can range the full spectrum
from just simply boring
to gut-wrenching,
you know, nerve-wracking,
and, you know, anxiety-provoking.
So anywhere along that spectrum
of a task that makes us feel that
in these negative emotions
in one form or another,
those are the tasks
that we're more likely to procrastinate on.
And so when we look at procrastination
then in terms of emotion regulation,
one way to think about
is that we're not avoiding the task, per se. What we're avoiding is the negative emotions associated with that task. And so procrastination becomes a way to cope with that negative mood and those negative emotions, especially if you're someone who hasn't had a lot of experience managing your negative emotions effectively, or maybe you've got a lot of other stressors going on in your life that, you know, you've sort of your resources, your inner resources for coping with a task that might be really unpleasant or stressful or
frustrating or creates a lot of worry for you. In those sorts of situations, you might resort to
procrastination because what procrastination does is it gives you immediate relief. It's why we say it's
sort of a short-term mood repair. It gives you that quick fix. So you take that task that's really
stressing you out. You've got that report you've got to write. You're worried about what your
manager is going to think because maybe, you know, promotion rides on it or you're worried
with you're going to be doing it correctly or if you're going to do it just perfectly is what you
want and you take that task, you put it aside and you get busy with other things, and
you've now have this immediate sense of relief, you've actually just repaired that negative
mood and you feel better.
And the problem with that is it's immediately reinforcing.
You get rewarded for doing that.
And this is where some people can get caught in the trap of procrastination is almost a
chronic habit or way of dealing with these unpleasant tasks.
So yeah, that's how the emotions are involved.
It's really about the emotions that are associated with the task.
And not necessarily the unpleasantness of the task, it doesn't have to be objectively an unpleasant task,
but it's what our interaction with that task, you know, the emotions that arise from that interaction
and how it makes us feel.
And if it's something unpleasant and we can't quite work through those feelings, procrastination
became a way to solve that, at least in the short run.
So what are some strategies or techniques to combat procrastination and just get things done?
And how does thinking of it as an emotion regulation problem change how we approach the situation?
Well, I think that's really key.
If we want to address any type of problem, we've got to know what the core cause is.
And if we, you know, coming at it from this mood regulation or motion regulation perspective,
then what that suggests is that we need to find ways to make.
those emotions first and foremost. And there's multiple layers of doing this. I think, you know,
especially if it's a task that's really creating a lot of stress and really a little of frustration or
anxiety or anticipated anxiety. Sometimes it's not how we feel right now, but we're anticipating
that as soon as we, you know, start working on this task, we're going to get frustrated and
that's enough to keep us from getting going with it. So, you know, finding ways to manage those negative
motions, especially if they're really intense, is key. And some very simple ways,
the research is borne out, you know, that takes sort of the edge off them is forgiveness and
self-compassion. And it sounds counterintuitive because, you know, you know, collectively we like
to think about, you know, sort of productivity and just, you know, crack the whip and get going.
And if somebody is not being productive and procrastinating, we think if we push them harder
and get on their case, then they'll actually be more productive rather than saying, hey,
it's okay, you know, and taking more of a compassionate approach. And actually, um, the research suggests
that those, both those approaches can be very beneficial. Forgiving, you know, students who forgave
themselves for procrastinating on academic work were found two weeks later to actually procrastinate
less. And we know that self-compassion is, can be a very powerful tool for regulating negative
emotions. And that's another approach too, especially for really struggling and just say, you know,
it's not giving yourself a free pass. It's basically saying, hey, yeah, I'm not, you know, I'm struggling with this task. I'm having difficulty. But you know what? It's okay. Other people have struggled with this task too. There's nothing special about my struggle. I just need to kind of work through that rather than, you know, getting hard on my, you know, getting hard on myself or beating myself up about this and making it worse, which actually can make it worse. The more that, you know, you get more critical about yourself about procrastinating, that can.
can actually increase the chances that you'll continue to procrastinate.
Right.
You get into that endless feedback loop.
Yeah, exactly.
So how does chronic procrastination affect people's mental and physical well-being?
Has a huge impact on it.
And I think, you know, this is a thing a lot of people don't think about when they think about
procrastination, right?
We think about the immediate damage it can cause.
So if you're a student and you procrastinating your academic work, then it's likely you're not going
to do as well performance-wise. You're going to hand in things late and you're not going to do your
best work. And the research bears this out. You know, people, students who chronically procrastinate
tend to have poor performance in terms of their grades. And in the workplace as well,
people who chronically procrastinate or procrastinate regularly don't get, don't progress
through their company as well. They tend to also have more insecure, you know, job status. In other
they're jumping from job to job and they never really advance much. And they actually make less
money than people who don't chronically procrastinate. And there's been some research on that.
So we tend to think of the productivity side of it. But a lot of what my research has focused on
over the last couple of decades is exactly what you said. There's these real health consequences.
Procrastination can be bad for your health. And so we know it's associated with, you know,
higher rates of depression and anxiety, definitely higher rates of stress. That's one thing I found
consistently, not just with students that I've done research with, but also adults out in the
community. And it can have very real physical health effects. And this makes some sense if we think
about how harmful stresses to our bodies, right? Not just it's harmful for our mental health.
It's also harmful for our physical health. It has an impact on our immune system, makes us more
vulnerable, you know, to catching bugs and flus and colds and all kinds of other stress-related
illnesses. And this is something that I found in my own research to, students who chronically
procrastinate tend to report more of these sort of stress-related, you know, mild health complaints.
But they also can impact, you know, engaging in health behaviors. So if you're, you know,
changing your diet, right, something that can be unpleasant, right? You have to give up some
foods that you really enjoy, getting off the couch and away from the screen and getting out
and doing physical exercise if you're not used to it, that can be unpleasant to start too. And so,
you know, it's not surprising that we find that people chronically procrastinate also tend to
put off engaging in those health-promoting behaviors that would really help their health overall.
So if you put those two things together, higher stress, right, and poor health behaviors,
and you tie that in with somebody who's got this pattern of dealing with unpleasant tasks in this very avoidant manner by procrastinating.
Over time, there's going to be some cumulative damage.
And although, you know, I've only done one study in this area, one study that I did do,
looking at people with their heart health, so in terms of having hypertension or cardiovascular disease,
I found that those who scored higher on a measure of chronic procrastination, when you controlled
for all kinds of other factors that might account for poor heart health, you know, they were
more likely to be in the group that had poor heart health. I think it worked out to the extent
that they had a one point increase on this measure. So it was a self-report measure that we use.
We ask people about, you know, how often they procrastinate or if they're putting
things off to tomorrow. So for every one point's increase on that measure, their chances of having
poor heart health increased by 63%. And that's after accounting for a lot of other factors.
Wow. Yeah. But, you know, it makes sense, too, because if you're stressed all the time and you're
not looking after your health, these healthy behaviors, and stress and health behaviors are two key
pathways to good health, and when you don't engage, and then we know that they are risk factors
for poor heart health. So, you know, I mean, I think that's kind of, you know, the extreme
case over several decades. So there's short-term health impacts, but there's also some more
serious long-term health impacts as well. So a moment ago you mentioned the couch and the screen
being able to get away from those things. I'm wondering whether you know, does the ubiquity of
social media and electronic devices have an impact on procrastination or have procrastinators
always been able to find excuses to put things off?
That's a great question.
You know, there's some procrastination research that looked just at that, just looked at, you
know, sort of social media and digital distractions.
And that's their whole research program is in that area.
And there is indeed a connection.
So people who are prone to procrastination do tend to use more social media,
tend to be, you know, engage with their digital distractions.
And, you know, there might be some generational influences there too, right?
But that being said, you know, there's other things that we can do to engage in procrastination for sure.
And if you look at something like bedtime procrastination, which is a particular form of procrastination
where you say, hey, I've got an important meeting tomorrow morning.
I'm going to go to bed at 11 o'clock.
And here we are 1 a.m. in the morning and you're still on your social media.
You know, or you may be sitting.
up reading that novel or you may be knitting that sweater. So the researchers that have looked at what
people do to procrastinate on their bedtimes, it's not just digitally oriented distractions. They
engage in a whole bunch of things. Some of them bake even. I mean, it's really bizarre. So I think it's,
you know, whatever your fancy is, right? You know, it's something to distract you from the emotions that
you're not dealing with about the tasks that you should be doing, which is going to bad, right? And
maybe it's because you, you know, you haven't processed what went on in that day.
But, you know, that, again, it's an emotion regulation issue.
And I think, yeah, the digital media makes it easier for certain generations.
And I think that other generations might equally find other, you know, types of distractions
and activities to engage in.
In fact, anecdotally, a lot of the people I've talked to, when I say I do procrastination research,
I get a lot of people telling me about the procrastination story.
So you hear a lot of different things.
And, you know, I remember there was one journalist I spoke to, and he said, yeah, I remember, you know, when I was a student in university. And, you know, I hate cleaning. I hate cleaning house. But whenever I had a big paper or exam coming, boy, was my house ever clean. So, you know, instead of doing studying, he was running around, getting, you know, the house perfectly clean. And you see this a lot. It's not like procrastinator is sitting around lazy. They're doing other things. It's just not that thing.
that they should be doing right now. That's looming and important and will have negative consequences
if they don't get it done. In prepping for this conversation, I of course had to go to Dr. Google
and find out who are famous procrastinators. And there are lists, so you've probably seen them.
And they include luminaries like the Dalai Lama, Frank Lloyd Wright, Herman Melville, Leonardo da Vinci.
Putting aside whether these lists are historically accurate, they raise the question,
is it possible to be a chronic procrastinator, but also extremely productive?
That is a really good question.
And I think, yeah, I mean, I would go back to, well, were they really procrastinating or were
they engaging in some other form of delay?
You know, so we talk about sagacious delay where on the surface, when somebody put something
off, we might look at them and say, hey, they're procrastinating.
Or we might even look at our own behavior.
And just because it's a delay and we're not doing what we know we should be doing,
we might say, well, I'm procrastinating.
But if you sort of look below the surface, it may be that maybe you haven't started that report because you're waiting to hear back with some key information that's essential for you to get going on this.
And if you started without that information, you actually would be wasting a lot of time, right?
And so I think we really do have to make that distinction between delay and procrastination.
There might be some really, you know, monumental delays out there, but they could be sagacious delays, wise delays who are doing it with purpose.
Yeah, and I think the people that I've spoken to who really struggle with procrastination, they are in a bad way.
They have career issues, health issues.
They're not fulfilling their dreams.
They're not reaching their goals.
So, you know, rather than frame it in terms of productivity, which I think feeds into a lot of our social norms about who we, you know, what we shouldn't shouldn't be doing and how much we shouldn't be doing, I'd rather frame it around people's, you know, whether you're reaching your goals or not.
Or do you have all these things you started and never finished?
Do you have all these unfulfilled goals that you just never got around to doing because fear or failure or just worried it wasn't going to be good enough or worried whether you could manage maybe some of the challenges that you might face when you engage with that task?
Given that these famous alleged procrastinators maybe weren't procrastinators at all, I thought it was interesting that there weren't a lot of women on the lists that I saw.
A couple of names popped up, Margaret Atwood, J.K. Rowling, for example, who are also highly productive.
But should we take that to mean, if there's any truth to these lists at all, that women procrastinate less than men?
So that's a great question.
It's a little bit controversial.
So the evidence, it's a little mixed.
A lot of studies haven't found any difference.
And since some more recent evidence does suggest that men tend to.
procrastinate a little bit more than women. So, and often it depends on the measures that you're
using as well. And I guess here we're talking about chronic procrastination as opposed to sort of,
you know, procrastinating from time to time. So yeah, I would say there's, there is some evidence
suggests men might procrastinate a little bit more than women. But it's not a huge difference.
And we may get some evidence in the coming years that that levels out because I think it is really
driven also by what's going on, you know, just coming out of the situation we're coming out
of now, what more people working from home and having to deal with a lot of distractions they didn't
have to deal with before. I think that would kind of level the playing field for many people as well
in terms of, you know, whether they were able to be productive or whether they found themselves
falling into a trap of procrastination. Well, somewhat related to my last question, are there
cultural differences among people who procrastinate. For example, there's some countries where
deadlines are loose, trains and planes don't run on fixed schedules. And then there are other countries
where efficiency and productivity are highly valued. So are we all in some sense a product of our
culture when it comes to procrastination? The best way to answer that, and I do agree, there are
there's different cultural norms, if you like, and sort of just unspoken standards about
you know what is and isn't acceptable you know across different countries in
different parts of the world I would think that it's more about it's not necessarily
that you would procrastinate more or less necessarily depending on what the
restraints were on if you were if it was a country where you know the tolerance
for procrastination was quite low that might certainly have an impact but I
think it's about the acceptability as well so and you know there is some
research there's some procrastination researchers down in Peru
and we do these conferences every couple of years
and just sort of international conference on procrastination
and we hear about the different research that's going on
different parts of the world on the topic of procrastination
and one of the researchers there,
she mentioned that, you know, especially in the workplace,
you know, in Peru, it's like people procrastinate quite regularly
because they see their managers and their bosses procrastinating.
So it sets a standard and everyone thinks it's okay.
But there's tolerance for it too.
So there's not so much as a strong response to procrastination in cultures where things are a little bit more lax in terms of timelines.
And I think it has to do with deadlines and how flexible those are.
Then you go to other parts of the world and one part of the world where there's actually quite a booming
research or culture of researchers looking into procrastination, that's Germany.
And again, we think of, you know, Germany is being highly efficient, you know, trains running on time and everything sort of very precise.
And the tolerance there for procrastination is quite low.
And that's probably why there's a lot of research into it there too.
But I remember some years back at one of our conferences, we had some students presenting posters about their research on procrastination.
And there was this, what did they call it?
They called it a procrastination ambulance, which was, I think, their way of terms.
translating saying it was like a clinic for procrastination at a university for students who were really
troubled by their procrastination. So they could come in, engage in this program over a few weeks
that would help reduce their procrastination. And, you know, they showed the data suggesting
that their program worked and they showed the sort of the mean scores on this measure of chronic
procrastination at the beginning of, you know, them coming to the clinic and at the end so they could
say, oh, look, there's some improvement. And I remember standing there with a colleague of mine,
and we both were looking at the scores on this measure of procrastination at time one.
And the level of procrastination that they found troubling was well below the average national
mean for the procrastination in the U.S. and Canada.
But this was troubling in Germany.
In Canada, U.S., it would have been, that's not an issue.
Yeah, I could see that.
Yeah.
So, yeah, I think, and this is my saying, sort of the tolerance for procrastination, I think, differs.
across different cultural contexts.
You also study perfectionism, which is a topic that we recently talked about on another
episode of this podcast.
I just want to ask if perfectionism and procrastination are linked and are perfectionists
more or less likely to procrastinate?
Great question.
Yeah.
And I think, you know, first thing I have to say is that perfectionism isn't sort of a single entity.
We have these sort of different subcategories or dimensions of perfectionism.
So there's this thing called perfectionistic concerns, which is sort of a self-critical type of perfectionism, where the person has really high, you know, standards for themselves and is really driven to try and please other people.
And, you know, their self-worth is contingent upon whether they live up to some sort of idealized standard that they think society or their friends or their family expect of them.
And then you've got this other flavor of perfectionism, which is this perfectionistic strivings, which is more someone who's, you're not.
driven by their own internal standards, but these standards are still quite high.
And so because of that, they might sort of not be able to savor their successes when they actually
reach those standards.
And so we actually conducted some research a couple years ago where we did this thing called
a meta-analysis, which is basically a review of all the research has ever been done looking
at the associations between perfectionism, both perfectionism dimensions there, and procrastination.
And we had, you know, 40 some odd studies that included 10,000 people.
And when we looked at the links between chronic procrastination and perfectionism,
we indeed found that individuals who were more prone to chronic procrastination also scored higher on this measure of the self-critical perfectionism.
However, there wasn't a link with the other form of perfectionism.
So I sort of lay that out there because it's slightly different there.
I can say yes and no because no to one type, but yes to another.
And I think it makes sense, though, too, because if you're really driven and your whole sense of self-worth is focused on how well you do this task and you're so worried about that task, that's enough.
That fear of failing, that fear of it not being good enough or not pleasing others can be enough to put you off ever even starting it.
And the other thing that happens, too, when you don't start a task, you can still live in that wonderful,
space, right, where you can imagine how great it's going to be. And you can picture how perfect
the ending is going to be when you finish, you know, writing that report or, you know,
redecorating your house or whatever it is at that task that you're dealing with at that time.
But in minutes you take action and start to encounter problems, which we all do, right? It's never a
straight direct path from point A to point B when we're trying to reach our goals. There's ups and downs
along the way. But people who are, you know, have these sort of self-critical perfectionism,
the minute they hit one of those bumps in the road, so we speak, on the path to their goal,
they give up, right? They have a zero tolerance sort of policy for any sort of mistakes or anything
not going correctly. And so they tap out. And then, yeah, what we see that as procrastination.
Procrastination has to be a tough thing to study in a lab. How do you do that? I mean, if you
bring people in to be observed and to be experimental subjects, what do you tell them to procrastinate?
I mean, how do you do this? The quick answer is, you can't. You actually can't because, you know,
if we look at the definition, it's got to be something they intended to do. We can't impose that on them.
I mean, that being said, there has been some experimental research done where they gave, you know,
students a range of tasks easy and more difficult and looked at the time on task and what things they did otherwise.
But that's the closest we can get to it.
And so this is one of the reasons why, you know, at least with my research anyways,
what I've defaulted to is looking at people who have a chronic tendency to procrastinate.
Because that's in a sense like we're holding that, you know, procrastination constant.
And we're looking at what are the sort of thoughts that they have.
What are the sort of, you know, consequences that they experience, right?
And so, and then, you know, I also studying it naturalistically.
So recording behavior.
So some of my students have looked at, you know, getting people to answer some questionnaires at one time point.
And then following up with them and getting to fill in with grids, you know, based on, you know, 30-minute or 15-minute segments of the day,
were you procrastinating in that time.
And then we do a bit of a calculation to get an idea of how many minutes they were procrastinating.
So it's much easier to study it in sort of a naturalistic setting by just getting people to self-report or to look at people who,
chronically procrastinate because what you're studying the lab is going to be delay for sure,
but it isn't necessarily going to be procrastination, and that is a real challenge.
So last question. What are you working on now? What are the next things that you're looking at
in the realm of procrastination or even the other areas where you're doing research?
Great. Yeah, I'm doing a few different things. So one of the projects I want to look at,
I know there was this type of work that was done with perfectionism showing that perfectionism is increasing over time.
So I'm curious to know whether rates of procrastination over the last couple decades are increasing over time as well.
So that's one project that I'll be working on and we're looking at sort of existing research out there to see if the mean levels of procrastination, chronic procrastination that is, have gone up, especially in student samples over the last couple of decades.
The other areas I'm looking at is trying to get a handle on some of, you know, what's happening with respect to the emotion regulation.
And specifically, you know, this idea that we tend to often not get started on a task because we make emotional mountains out of molehills, right?
So there's this task, we may not have enough information about it, and we start imagining how difficult it's going to be and how complex is going to be and how complex is going to be.
and how we're going to fail or struggle.
And that's enough to keep us from actually getting started on the task.
And this sort of fits in with an area of research that's called effective forecasting,
which basically says that as human beings, we're not very good at predicting our future emotional states.
And I think this happens a lot with procrastination, that we predict that we're going to feel a lot worse
when we're doing the task than when we actually get on and just do it.
And we also think that it's going to last longer.
We're going to be stuck in the state of frustration or stress or what have you as we're struggling with this task.
And, you know, push comes to shove and we actually do it.
It's like, wait a second, that actually wasn't very hard at all.
And it was a lot faster to get through than what I expected.
But there isn't a lot of research on that.
So that's conducting some experiments now to see if, you know, maybe people prone to procrastination are over, you know, anticipating how difficult that task is going to be.
So just sort of drilling down into understanding better, that emotional side.
And then some of the other work I'm doing is just, again,
trying to maybe get some more hard indicators of the health effects.
So actually looking at more objective measures, you know,
you're looking using sort of like smart watches, right,
to track people's behavior, their physical activity,
and seeing, again, if in fact, you know, people who are prone to procrastination
are actually being less active than others.
Oh, and I'll mention one final thing, too.
I've done some preliminary work looking at using self-compassion to address procrastination,
and it does suggest that it at least increases people's intentions to get on with the task and not procrastinate,
but I want to follow up with some research to actually track that.
So if we tell people to recall a time that they're procrastinating and then give them this sort of script
that reframes that experience in a self-compassionate manner, you know, basically you're not the first person to procrastinate, nor will you be the last, right? So, you know, get over it, get on with it and move forward, right? Then, you know, does that actually have an impact on their ability to, you know, stop procrastinating and get things done?
Well, that's some good advice for you procrastinators who are listening to us today. Just do it and you'll feel a lot better than you think you will.
Well, I want to thank you for joining me today, Dr. Sirwa.
I'm so glad that we did not put off this discussion.
Myself as well.
Thank you for having me.
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