You know what you should do. The task exists, the idea is clear, and importance has called to your conscience for days. Yet something else opens. You read a message. You arrange a small detail. You watch “the right moment.”
Procrastination gives the impression of weak will. In fact, it’s usually something else: an intention that hasn’t found its system yet.
Why we procrastinate
Others’ urgency becomes our urgency
Requests, messages, interruptions: each notification opens a door toward scattering. Without filtering, we adopt others’ priorities instead of our own.
We mix up importance with urgency
An urgent task that demands a response is presented urgently. Without filtering, the basic task usually stays silent: it has no fixed deadline, so it stays waiting for the rest of the hours.
The task isn’t the problem
In my framework, continuity, the second pillar, means accepting permission for the task with the importance, methodically. The task demands a fictional act. The importance has no immediate results.
How to rank your priorities clearly
1. Get tasks out of your head
Write them in one trusted place. This alone clears the mind.
2. Separate fictional task from importance
Ask: will this have a real effect if delayed? If the answer is no, it’s fictional.
3. Hold a simple structure
Don’t seek a complete system. The system carries what willpower alone can’t.
What I learned from managing programs
I learned that the program doesn’t get derailed in the end, but rather when priorities aren’t defined clearly from the beginning.
What’s next?
Stopping procrastination starts with ranking priorities, not willpower alone. This is part of building the second pillar.
Next step: Read the Method
Frequently Asked Questions
Is procrastination laziness?
No. Laziness rejects effort entirely. Procrastination delays without rejecting it.
What if every task seems urgent?
Rare in practice. When it happens, response is structure, not panic.
How do I start when everything is jumbled?
Choose just one task. Any beginning is better than staying in thought.



