The Origin of Procrastination
Why do we as humans frequently act in ways......

Why do we as humans frequently act in ways that we don’t actually want to? How many times have you said or done something that makes you squirm when you think about it later? The fact is that your unconscious mind is in charge of most of your actions, particularly those that are difficult to explain intellectually. Procrastination is when you know what you should do and have the skill and desire to do it, but you don’t. Although there are several apparent grounds for procrastination, the main cause of this irrational behavior is found in your subconscious mind.
Your conscious mind’s ability to deal with life is severely constrained. The amount of conscious control you have is usually restricted to one item at a time. This is why relying on your willpower to effect long-term change seldom succeeds. What you need to do is alter your automatic behavior, which is stored in your unconscious mind, the portion of your brain that regulates all of your mind’s and body’s critical functions. Willpower can be used to combat procrastination, although it is typically only a temporary solution. The reason of procrastination is not your conscious acts, but rather your unconscious connections, which are to a considerable part to blame for your behaviors.
Your nervous system is created to protect you, and when fear arises, your nervous system will “kick in” to “defend you” through the activity of your sub-conscious. The irony is that we unknowingly learn ourselves to dread some things by associating erroneous meanings with them. Nothing in life has any significance until you give it one. You physically “store” neurological connections to events in your nervous system so that you can behave fast and appropriately the following time. Whenever anything happens to you, the way you describe the event to yourself gives it significance. Unconsciously, you’re continually trying to figure out what anything means, and at the most basic level, you’re trying to figure out if it implies pain or pleasure. This meaning is then stored in your subconscious mind, where it will later help you act (or re-act) properly. The problem is that when associations are reinforced, beliefs are formed that have a significant impact on your behavior and are frequently the source of procrastination.
Despite the fact that procrastination defies logic, it exposes a lot about your unconscious and self-imposed limitations and (in)abilities. Worry, primarily the fear that taking action would result in pain or a terrible experience of some type, is the leading cause of procrastination. Your unconscious mind mixes and searches its “files” to create a “link” that connects the action to an unpleasant event. This might be anything from a minor annoyance to something that is really severe.Even if you consciously desire to do something, your unconscious mind will stop you because it links the activity with pain. As humans, we instinctively seek comfort and will nearly always choose whatever seems most comfortable at the time. This is why you delay on chores that don’t feel good right now but will provide you a lot of joy in the future.
Learning to fight against this craving for comfort is what leads to all of the essential progress for you to achieve actual success. When you consider procrastination as a gift in disguise, you may begin to exploit it and benefit from the behavioral insights it provides. Procrastination exposes your anxieties and, by design, provides the necessary resistance for you to expand and grow in your ability to push over your concerns and create the life you truly desire. The amount of “discomfort” you can comfortably live with determines the quality of your existence. Procrastination may also reveal your most important goals, since your concern over postponing on them demonstrates that you care enough to be worried.
It’s been said that we shape our habits first, and then our habits shape us. This is also true of mental habits, and procrastination is frequently manifested as a regular pattern of thought. Your ideas influence and are influenced by your actions. Your actions will “play the same melody” every time, just like an etched pattern on a record. Your connections with pain and pleasure play a vital role in determining what you will or will not do in your regular behavior. When your habit pattern is activated, you create habitual thought patterns that drive you to automatically act or withdraw in specific ways.
In order to address the core cause of procrastination, you must be conscious of your associations with pain and pleasure. There are several symptomatic remedies that will not provide a long-term answer. Although willpower is required at first, the goal is to re-establish your connections with the chores you are avoiding. If you can overcome your self-imposed anxieties and take action, you can be, do, or have anything your heart desires. Although the root of procrastination is in your subconscious mind, your conscious actions are ultimately in charge.



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