Published: June 13, 2025
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Procrastination isn't laziness or poor time management. World's top procrastination expert, Dr. Tim Pychyl's 30-year study revealed what's really happening to you: Emotional self-sabotage Here's his simple 4-step protocol to break this loop: 🧵

Image in tweet by Mark Woodland

Dr. Pychyl discovered that true procrastination is different from other delays. Purposeful delay and inevitable delay aren't procrastination. Real procrastination is voluntary delay despite expecting to be worse off. And his research found a consistent pattern...

When people finally started avoided tasks, they consistently reported: "This isn't as bad as I thought. Why didn't I start earlier?" The problem isn't the task itself. It's the negative emotions we associate with it, and how avoidance rewards us by removing those feelings.

Dr. Pychyl's protocol targets this emotional root cause. His research showed that once you address the emotions, action becomes natural. Here's his step-by-step system to break this pattern:

Step 1: Make Implementation Intentions Replace vague goals with specific "when-then" plans. Instead of "I'll work on my project this weekend" Use: "When I finish coffee, I will write the first paragraph of my report." This makes goals concrete and actionable.

Step 2: When resistance hits, don't fight the emotion. Use the RAIN Method: 1. Recognise: First, acknowledge that you're resisting. Feel your body wanting to move away from your desk. Catch yourself making excuses like "I'm hungry" when heading to the fridge.

2. Accept/Allow: Don't fight the feeling. Label it specifically: "I'm feeling anxious. I'm afraid this won't work out." Common emotions include perfectionism: "It won't be as good as others" or "What's the point?"

3. Investigate: Where's this coming from? What does it mean? Is this the only emotion available to you? Often when we name emotions, they lose power. 4. Nurture: Practice self-compassion. Accept your common humanity We all have strengths and weaknesses.

Key insight: "You can have an emotion without being that emotion." You're feeling anxious, but you aren't anxiety itself. This creates space for choice. Only after this emotional work can you move to action.

Step 3: Ask "What's the Next Action?" When overwhelmed, don't think about the entire project. Focus on the smallest possible step Instead of "write the report" try "open the document." Instead of "clean the house" try "put one dish in the dishwasher."

Step 4: Take Deep Breaths Before starting any avoided task, regulate your nervous system. Deep breathing helps calm your response to stress. This simple step changes your brain state from resistance to readiness.

Remember: Motivation follows action, not the other way around. You don't need to "feel like it" to start. Dr. Pychyl's research proved that once people began avoided tasks, they consistently reported tasks felt less difficult and stressful than expected.

This protocol works because it addresses the real problem. Your emotional relationship with discomfort. When you stop fighting emotions and start working with them, procrastination loses its power. Start with one avoided task today and watch what happens.

Thanks for reading! If this helped, follow me @MarkAWoodland for insights on leadership, solving inefficiencies, and building better systems. Repost for your network:🔄

Video/ Image credits: • World's Leading Expert On How To Solve Procrastination - Dr Tim Pychyl https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

@MarkAWoodland Your thread is creating a buzz! #TopUnroll https://threadreaderapp.com/th... 🙏🏼@VickiJo28765736 for 🥇unroll

@MarkAWoodland Emotional self-sabotage? Sounds like a Tuesday. 😜 Anyone else’s “protocol” involve dark chocolate?

@MarkAWoodland @Startell3 I’m in two minds as to whether to believe this. I shall ponder for a few days on the matter. Or not. Not sure.

@MarkAWoodland I'll have a look tomorrow thanks

@MarkAWoodland Bookmarked 👍

@MarkAWoodland @grok where can I watch this interview in full

@MarkAWoodland I will see it later

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