{"id":4042,"date":"1959-11-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1959-11-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/november-1959-vol-40-no-9-why-procrastinate\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T13:06:42","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T13:06:42","slug":"november-1959-vol-40-no-9-why-procrastinate","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/november-1959-vol-40-no-9-why-procrastinate\/","title":{"rendered":"November 1959 &#8211; Vol. 40, No. 9 &#8211; Why Procrastinate?"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Everyone in these days suffers                     under the feeling of being pressed for time. We do not seem                     to catch up with things as we used to do. We are afraid to                     sit down with only our thoughts for company, because those                     thoughts inevitably turn on something we should be doing.<\/p>\n<p> Much of this feeling is due to procrastination, the habit                     of needlessly putting off things to which we should attend.                     The putting off is in turn caused by inertia and lack of planning.<\/p>\n<p>This is a serious problem, because procrastination does                     more than almost any other habit to deprive us of satisfaction,                     success and happiness. It does not solve any problem when                     we toss it into the tray marked &#8220;pending.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>More than two centuries ago Edward Young, disappointed in                     law, politics and in his thirty-five year rectorship                     of a small church, wrote the often-quoted line &#8220;Procrastination                     is the thief of time.&#8221; In fact, procrastination is much more.                     It is the thief of our self-respect. It nags at us and                     spoils our fun. It deprives us of the fullest realization                     of our ambitions and hopes.<\/p>\n<p>In business, a man who hesitates is lost. He seeks, quite                     rightly, to bring to bear on his decisions the mature judgment                     that is the outcome of thought directed toward solving a problem,                     but there is a deadline beyond which he must not prolong his                     deliberation. He must make decisions, and not postpone them,                     or his opportunity for profit and fulfilment disappear.<\/p>\n<p>In our other life, the cultural part, procrastination is                     equally damaging. There is usually no want of desire on the                     part of most persons to arrive at the results of self-culture,                     but there is great temptation not to pay the necessary cost                     of it in time and work.<\/p>\n<p>Even our leisure is eaten into by procrastination. So many                     people complain that they have no time for leisure. They are                     constantly driven. Life for them is a steady grind or a mad                     dream. These are people who do not organize their time and                     energy. They are of the sort that find themselves nervously                     unfit to deal with immediate things, to stand the pressure                     of an urgent job.<\/p>\n<p>It is amusingly true that few of us really enjoy the sensation                     of putting things off. Our consciences prevent us from taking                     pleasure out of postponing our chores.<\/p>\n<h3>Menace to success<\/h3>\n<p>Business men who are today at the heights of success are                     invariably men who were judicious enough to exert themselves                     at the proper time twenty or thirty years ago. They did not                     put off any of the things that were necessary to their advancement.                     Having their eye on tomorrow&#8217;s opportunities they got today&#8217;s                     business out of the way today. As Samuel Smiles said pungently                     in his <em>Self Help<\/em>: Men who are habitually behind in                     their work are as habitually behind success. You do not see                     listless or languid men at the top of the executive tree.<\/p>\n<p>Many men may credit their success in life to looking just                     a little way ahead and so bringing the future up to the present.                     They say to themselves: &#8220;If I do that now&#8230;&#8221; instead of &#8220;If                     I find myself compelled to do that sometime&#8230;&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>Young people particularly need to beware of putting off.                     Dante described the vice in this way: &#8220;Hesitating I remain                     at war &#8216;twixt will and will not in my thoughts.&#8221; Eventually,                     perhaps sooner than we think, it is too late. In maturity,                     the procrastinating man finds himself one of the many ordinary,                     dispensable, workers, while his boyhood chum who busied himself                     sits at the mahogany desk.<\/p>\n<p>When things are deferred till the last minute, and nothing                     prepared beforehand, every step finds an impediment. It becomes                     harder to do things. We are pushed into blundering through                     on hasty judgments.<\/p>\n<p>Herein is a paradox. By trying to take things easy we do                     not make things easy. It is possible to spend more energy                     in figuring out ways to escape a task than is necessary to                     accomplish it. Our available energy is lowered by inward conflict                     between &#8220;do it now&#8221; and &#8220;put it off&#8221;. We lose our poise, because                     we are always catching up, always in a hurry to do today what                     we should have done yesterday, always off balance.<\/p>\n<p>Not only is procrastination a deadly blight on a man&#8217;s life,                     but it is a nuisance to all his companions. Everybody with                     whom the procrastinator has to do in family, factory or office                     is thrown from time to time into a state of fever. Everyone                     else has to work harder to take up the slack he leaves.<\/p>\n<h3>Habit comes slyly<\/h3>\n<p>The habit of putting off has a way of creeping upon us insidiously.                     What does it matter, we think, if we don&#8217;t write that letter                     today or telephone that prospect for business, or make that                     dental appointment? Tomorrow is always another day, we say                     blithely but childishly.<\/p>\n<p>Darwin put off publication of his theories from day to day                     and finally from year to year, despite the urging of his friends,                     until he was scooped by a fellow-scientist half a world                     away. And people today, even in the most enlightened countries,                     are killing themselves by putting off such simple, though                     vital, things as seeing their doctors.<\/p>\n<p>It is a salutary exercise to consider the successes we almost                     enjoyed but which escaped us because we put off decision or                     action. By doing things as they come along we entertain our                     great opportunities. But if we say to opportunity: &#8220;I am young;                     there is plenty of time&#8221;, then opportunity passes us by and                     we find that, as Francis Bacon remarked in one of his essays,                     &#8220;opportunity has a bald noodle behind, there is nothing to                     grasp.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>None of us needs to look beyond himself for examples. We                     postponed writing that report on Wednesday, found ourselves                     loaded with pressing jobs on Thursday and Friday, and now                     we have to work over the weekend without secretarial help                     and with no one to provide answers to unexpected questions.                     We put off visiting our ailing friend on our way East, saying                     that we could take time for the visit on our return journey,                     but by then it was too late. We put off our household or garden                     chores, perhaps trifling away our time in idle chat, and find                     ourselves overwhelmed by visitors or urgent duties.<\/p>\n<p>The penalties of procrastination are heavy. Many a man has                     discovered after his house burned down that he had let his                     insurance lapse the previous month.<\/p>\n<p>Many a salesman has found business going to rivals because                     he put off deciding how to approach difficult prospects.<\/p>\n<h3>What causes procrastination?<\/h3>\n<p>It is all very well to admit that procrastination is a bad                     thing, but if we are to do anything effective toward its cure                     we must know something of what causes it.<\/p>\n<p>It may be the product of indolence, a vice which rewards                     everyone scurvily. Indolence may be the weak link in the chain                     of a business man&#8217;s character. It may show itself in the dawdling                     of the workman, in the listlessness of the housewife, in the                     sloth of the panhandler. All these people are putting off                     something. They are reluctant to tackle a job, or are baffled                     by small difficulties, or are engrossed in spinning out some                     activity unnecessarily.<\/p>\n<p>Procrastination may, in some instances, be attributed to                     ill health. Energy to tackle jobs and get them out of the                     way is the product of physical health and a purpose.<\/p>\n<p>A child who cannot find his clothes in the morning may be                     unknowingly rebelling against school, and postponing his having                     to go there. A man who explodes in the midst of a business                     conference may be motivated by an inward irritation that follows                     a sense of putting off something that should have been given                     immediate attention.<\/p>\n<p>If you are a chronic procrastinator it may be that your                     parents did more for you than they should have done. Perhaps                     they &#8220;picked up&#8221; after you, and did the things you left undone.                     You learned that by putting off duties nothing serious happened:                     someone else did the work.<\/p>\n<p>But today you find that your habit leads to unending ills.                     You are actually putting off living to some fictional future                     date. You are making yourself unhappy because in deferring                     your life to the future you are missing the present and its                     golden opportunities for rich living. You are putting off                     until tomorrow not only duties and jobs but happiness and                     achievement.<\/p>\n<p>Samuel Johnson called tomorrow &#8220;that fatal mistress of the                     young, the lazy, the coward and the fool.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Unpleasant things<\/h3>\n<p>The truth is that we are most inclined to postpone doing                     things that seem at the time to be unpleasant, distasteful                     or difficult. When we have something like that to do, we putter                     around with little things, trying to keep busy so that we                     have an excuse that will ease our consciences. Dreading and                     postponing a task may be more tiring than doing it, and apprehension                     over delayed unpleasantnesses may so preoccupy us that other                     things cannot be done effectively.<\/p>\n<p>None of us escapes his quota of difficult or disagreeable                     tasks, and it would be well to learn from the experience of                     others rather than from our own that they do not fade away                     by being ignored. Eventually, we have to roll up our sleeves                     and wade into them. In the meantime, we suffer.<\/p>\n<p>Dr. Ernest Jones, F.R.C.P., gives us Hamlet as an example                     in his book <em>Hamlet and Oedipus <\/em>(Doubleday Anchor, 1954.)                     The reasons that Hamlet gives for his hesitancy will not stand                     serious consideration. Says Dr. Jones: &#8220;One moment he pretends                     he is too cowardly to perform the deed, at another he questions                     the truthfulness of the ghost, at another &#8211; when the opportunity                     presents itself in its naked form &#8211; he thinks the time is                     unsuited, it would be better to wait till the King was at                     some evil act and then to kill him, and so on. They have each                     of them, it is true, a certain plausibility&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>It is very different with the man who, honest with himself,                     has mastered the habit of putting off. He has no unpleasant                     jobs hanging fire. He has realized the menace of procrastination                     and makes sure that it never touches him. He knows that it                     is the vote you don&#8217;t cast that brings the wrong men into                     office, the kindness you think of but do not do that swells                     family unhappiness into misunderstandings, the phone call                     you don&#8217;t make that loses the order, the lunch for which you                     are late that blights your prospects of a new job.<\/p>\n<h3>Waiting for inspiration<\/h3>\n<p>An excuse sometimes made by writers, composers, business                     executives and other people engaged in creative work is that                     they are waiting for inspiration. But inspiration is a guest                     who does not visit the lazy or the procrastinator as often                     as he does the busy and diligent. Most writers find that the                     best way to win inspiration is to insert a blank sheet of                     paper in their typewriters.<\/p>\n<p>Sir Arthur Sullivan, composer of the Gilbert and Sullivan                     operas, oratorios and a score of other sorts of music, said                     this: &#8220;One day work is hard and another day it is easy, but                     if I had waited for inspiration I should have done nothing.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Many offices have people in them who sharpen pencils instead                     of getting down to solving the puzzles in a job. Other people                     shroud their actions in a maze of red tape, giving as the                     excuse for delay that they must consider the problem carefully                     from every angle and think of all the possibilities.<\/p>\n<p>On the whole, it is wiser to make decisions promptly and                     crisply than to linger over them waiting for a flash of inspiration.                     In a competitive society it may be staying much too late to                     wait till precisely the proper time.<\/p>\n<p>To put off a decision while gathering or awaiting pertinent                     information is not procrastination, but be sure that what                     is awaited is pertinent and necessary. All great leaders have                     deliberated with caution but acted with decision and promptness.<\/p>\n<p>By debating every problem, awaiting the divine spark that                     will shine upon the right decision, we show ourselves to be                     timid and distrustful of our own judgments. The Hamlets among                     us must learn that it is better to make a wrong decision than                     none at all. At least an error teaches a lesson that need                     never be repeated. To stand indecisively midway between our                     duty and our task is calamitous.<\/p>\n<p>Duty is not merely to do the thing we ought to do, but to                     do it when we should, whether we feel like it or not. When                     we make ourselves responsible for doing a job, making a plan,                     or directing others, we are duty and honour bound to do it                     at the time promised or expected.<\/p>\n<p>This brings up the matter of punctuality. Immature people                     excuse themselves for lateness by saying that they have no                     sense of time, without stopping to think that if this were                     so they would be ahead of time as often as they are behind                     time.<\/p>\n<p>There may be some who regard the catching of a train as                     a form of sport, and like to give the train a chance to get                     away, but people who take life at all seriously will consider                     it more sensible to start early than to hurry on the way.                     They will realize, too, that when meeting people instead of                     catching trains they are ill-bred who come late.<\/p>\n<p>A word should be said to the person who is the victim of                     another&#8217;s procrastination. Dr. Helen Brandon, a psychological                     counsellor, made constructive use of her time. In one year,                     she says, she spent some 120 hours a month waiting on something                     or somebody. &#8220;During this time I thought of 1000 article-ideas,                     worked on the case histories of more than 100 people, and                     spent at least one-third of the time relaxing in one                     way or another.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Time and efficiency<\/h3>\n<p>Time enters into efficiency in every activity. The essence                     of efficiency is economy of energy, space and time. It was                     wittily said by Lord Chesterfield of the old Duke of Newcastle:                     &#8220;His Grace loses an hour in the morning, and is looking for                     it all the rest of the day.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The well-organized life leaves time for everything,                     for planning, doing, and following through. Time does not                     boss this sort of life like a taskmaster with a whip. Time                     is not used up in regretting, or in trying to live life retroactively,                     or in explaining why something needed has not been done.<\/p>\n<p>Some persons are more afflicted by procrastination than                     others, but everyone has at least a tinge of it. There is                     no use in shrugging our shoulders and saying: &#8220;That&#8217;s the                     way I am&#8221;, or in trying to forget our weakness. The biographies                     of successful people are crammed with the stories of overcoming                     weaknesses.<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps the most valuable result of education, whether junior                     or adult, is to make us do the things we have to do when they                     ought to be done. Yet to cure the evil of procrastination                     it is not necessary to learn anything new in the way of information.                     Just relate what you already know to your daily problem.<\/p>\n<p>Begin in small ways. Make it a rule to be orderly and systematic                     in dealing with your mail: lay aside only such letters as                     really need further thought, and then take them up immediately                     after the routine mail has been disposed of. Make out a complete                     and honest statement of what you wish to do this day, this                     week, this year, and determine what obstacles are standing                     in your way. Odds are a hundred to one that you will find                     your time-and-energy schedule full of holes through                     which time is leaking: now that you have uncovered them, you                     have a chance to plug them.<\/p>\n<p>Your effort may mean the making of a new pattern of life,                     as you acquire skill in distinguishing between the better                     and the worse way of doing things. Why be a slave to conventional                     ways? Why must the mail be disposed of before you tackle the                     important business of the day? Why must routine housework                     be done before you turn to some major project?<\/p>\n<p>Try scheduling your time. Jot down the various jobs you                     must do or would like to do. Estimate the time needed for                     each. Number them in order of their importance to you. Then                     wade into them.<\/p>\n<p>In <em>The Vision of Mirza<\/em>, time was a tide stretching                     from mist to mist, without limits. But our everyday time is                     not like that at all; it is the space between getting up in                     the morning and going to bed at night. Into this space we                     must fit our various projects and the episodes of routine                     living. Weak men will drift through the hours; strong men                     will steer from this point to that.<\/p>\n<p>Whether you have a luxurious amount of free time, or are                     pinched for white space on your daily time chart, you will                     be happiest when you make sure of getting the best value for                     every minute. The way to avoid the feeling of marking time,                     of beating with futility at an unseen barrier, is to schedule                     your time.<\/p>\n<p>This involves concentration on the job at hand so as to                     get it done, but it also necessitates looking ahead.<\/p>\n<p>Baden Powell had a game for his Boy Scouts called &#8220;Near                     and Far&#8221;. A party of Scouts walking along a road would be                     halted at intervals and turned around.<\/p>\n<p>The boys were asked what they had noted at their feet and                     on the horizon. Seeing near and far is an essential part of                     planning our use of time.<\/p>\n<p>Some people find it comforting and inspiring to look back,                     at the end of a day, at what they have accomplished, both                     in big things and little. A day which seems to have gone awry,                     with our plans broken up by unforseen events, may appear to                     casual thinking a lost day, but when we count the items we                     find solace.<\/p>\n<h3>Overcoming inertia<\/h3>\n<p>Professional people tell us that all the world seeks rest.                     Water seeks its level and all forms of energy tend to run                     down to less strenuous activities. They call this entropy.<\/p>\n<p>Human beings, like things in nature, suffer from inertia.                     It takes more effort to start than to keep going, and it is                     easier to stop than to continue. Even worse, we find it possible                     to delude ourselves: we frame plans and make decisions and                     then allow ourselves to think of them as being completed.<\/p>\n<p>Decision is of little account unless it is followed by action,                     and there is no recipe for getting things done so good as                     the one to start doing them. Doing nothing is negative action,                     but it has positive consequences: discouragement, irritation,                     disappointment, and even ill health and mental upset.<\/p>\n<p>So don&#8217;t look too long at a job before starting it. Even                     if progress seems slight and futile, the act of starting and                     proceeding a little way is a mighty force inspiring us to                     continue toward successful completion. Initiative is a pallid                     thing unless it is kept going.<\/p>\n<p>Every man working toward success in professional, business                     or technical life will seek to find his weak points so that                     he may strengthen them. If his weak point is procrastination,                     he may have to work at it with some determination, because                     it has taken him a long time to achieve the proficiency in                     it he has now and he cannot expect to get over the habit in                     a week.<\/p>\n<p>Don&#8217;t let us defend our procrastination or find excuses                     for it. Churchill said with regard to the failure of planners                     in another area: &#8220;If you simply take up the attitude of defending                     it there will be no hope of improvement.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>By constructive thought and action, energetically applied                     to the elimination of procrastination from our lives, we may                     make the coming year much longer than the past year in terms                     of things done, happiness realized and vividness of life enjoyed.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[39],"class_list":["post-4042","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-39"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>November 1959 - Vol. 40, No. 9 - Why Procrastinate? - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/november-1959-vol-40-no-9-why-procrastinate\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"November 1959 - Vol. 40, No. 9 - Why Procrastinate? - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Everyone in these days suffers under the feeling of being pressed for time. 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We do not seem to catch up with things as we used to do. We are afraid to sit down with only our thoughts for company, because those thoughts inevitably turn on something we should be doing. 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