You procrastinate because your brain is playing a game of now or later with itself, and it always picks later.
Imagine you have two friends: Impatient Pete and Lazy Larry. Impatient Pete wants to do something fun right now, like eating candy or watching cartoons. Lazy Larry says, "Wait, why not just wait until tomorrow?" He’s happy to put off the work for a little bit of fun.
Your brain is like a toy box with two sides: one side has work (like cleaning up toys), and the other has fun (like playing with your favorite action figure). When you see the work, Impatient Pete jumps out and says, "Do it now!" But Lazy Larry sneaks in and says, "Just wait, you can do it later."
Sometimes, Lazy Larry wins because he knows that even though the fun is small now, it feels bigger later, like waiting for a bigger pile of candy tomorrow instead of eating one piece today.
That’s why you say, “I’ll do it tomorrow,” and then tomorrow comes, and you say, “I’ll do it the next day,” and so on. It’s not magic, it’s just your brain choosing later over now.
Examples
- A student puts off studying for a test until the night before.
- You choose to watch TV instead of doing your homework.
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See also
- How Does The Neuroscience of Procrastination Work?
- How Does Every Cognitive Skill Explained (In 3 Minutes) Work?
- How Does The ONLY Way To Stop Procrastinating | Mel Robbins Work?
- How Does The Science of Procrastination (and how to stop) Work?
- How Does The Science of Procrastination - And How To Manage It Work?