Why Procrastinators Procrastinate

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pro-cras-ti-na-tion |prəˌkrastəˈnāSHən, prō-|
noun
the action of delaying or postponing something: your first tip is to avoid procrastination.

Who would have thought that after decades of struggle with procrastination, the dictionary, of all places, would hold the solution.

Avoid procrastination. So elegant in its simplicity.

While we’re here, let’s make sure obese people avoid overeating, depressed people avoid apathy, and someone please tell beached whales that they should avoid being out of the ocean.

No, “avoid procrastination” is only good advice for fake procrastinators—those people that are like, “I totally go on Facebook a few times every day at work—I’m such a procrastinator!” The same people that will say to a real procrastinator something like, “Just don’t procrastinate and you’ll be fine.”

The thing that neither the dictionary nor fake procrastinators understand is that for a real procrastinator, procrastination isn’t optional—it’s something they don’t know how to not do.

In college, the sudden unbridled personal freedom was a disaster for me—I did nothing, ever, for any reason. The one exception was that I had to hand in papers from time to time. I would do those the night before, until I realized I could just do them through the night, and I did that until I realized I could actually start them in the early morning on the day they were due. This behavior reached caricature levels when I was unable to start writing my 90-page senior thesis until 72 hours before it was due, an experience that ended with me in the campus doctor’s office learning that lack of blood sugar was the reason my hands had gone numb and curled up against my will. (I did get the thesis in—no, it was not good.)

Even this post took much longer than it should have, because I spent a bunch of hours doing things like seeing this picture sitting on my desktop from a previous post, opening it, looking at it for a long time thinking about how easily he could beat me in a fight, then wondering if he could beat a tiger in a fight, then wondering who would win between a lion and a tiger, and then googling that and reading about it for a while (the tiger would win). I have problems.

To understand why procrastinators procrastinate so much, let’s start by understanding a non-procrastinator’s brain:

Pretty normal, right? Now, let’s look at a procrastinator’s brain:

Notice anything different?

It seems the Rational Decision-Maker in the procrastinator’s brain is coexisting with a pet—the Instant Gratification Monkey.

This would be fine—cute, even—if the Rational Decision-Maker knew the first thing about how to own a monkey. But unfortunately, it wasn’t a part of his training and he’s left completely helpless as the monkey makes it impossible for him to do his job.

The fact is, the Instant Gratification Monkey is the last creature who should be in charge of decisions—he thinks only about the present, ignoring lessons from the past and disregarding the future altogether, and he concerns himself entirely with maximizing the ease and pleasure of the current moment. He doesn’t understand the Rational Decision-Maker any better than the Rational Decision-Maker understands him—why would we continue doing this jog, he thinks, when we could stop, which would feel better. Why would we practice that instrument when it’s not fun? Why would we ever use a computer for work when the internet is sitting right there waiting to be played with? He thinks humans are insane.

In the monkey world, he’s got it all figured out—if you eat when you’re hungry, sleep when you’re tired, and don’t do anything difficult, you’re a pretty successful monkey. The problem for the procrastinator is that he happens to live in the human world, making the Instant Gratification Monkey a highly unqualified navigator. Meanwhile, the Rational Decision-Maker, who was trained to make rational decisions, not to deal with competition over the controls, doesn’t know how to put up an effective fight—he just feels worse and worse about himself the more he fails and the more the suffering procrastinator whose head he’s in berates him.

It’s a mess. And with the monkey in charge, the procrastinator finds himself spending a lot of time in a place called the Dark Playground.A lot of you are probably reading this article while in the Dark Playground.

The Dark Playground is a place every procrastinator knows well. It’s a place where leisure activities happen at times when leisure activities are not supposed to be happening. The fun you have in the Dark Playground isn’t actually fun because it’s completely unearned and the air is filled with guilt, anxiety, self-hatred, and dread. Sometimes the Rational Decision-Maker puts his foot down and refuses to let you waste time doing normal leisure things, and since the Instant Gratification Monkey sure as hell isn’t gonna let you work, you find yourself in a bizarre purgatory of weird activities where everyone loses.I spent two hours in the Dark Playground right before I drew the Dark Playground drawing, because I was dreading having to draw the signpost, which I knew would be hard and take forever (which it did).

And the poor Rational Decision-Maker just mopes, trying to figure out how he let the human he’s supposed to be in charge of end up here again.

Given this predicament, how does the procrastinator ever manage to accomplish anything?

As it turns out, there’s one thing that scares the shit out of the Instant Gratification Monkey:

The Panic Monster is dormant most of the time, but he suddenly wakes up when a deadline gets too close or when there’s danger of public embarrassment, a career disaster, or some other scary consequence.

The Instant Gratification Monkey, normally unshakable, is terrified of the Panic Monster. How else could you explain the same person who can’t write a paper’s introductory sentence over a two-week span suddenly having the ability to stay up all night, fighting exhaustion, and write eight pages? Why else would an extraordinarily lazy person begin a rigorous workout routine other than a Panic Monster freakout about becoming less attractive?

And these are the lucky procrastinators—there are some who don’t even respond to the Panic Monster, and in the most desperate moments they end up running up the tree with the monkey, entering a state of self-annihilating shutdown.

Quite a crowd we are.

Of course, this is no way to live. Even for the procrastinator who does manage to eventually get things done and remain a competent member of society, something has to change. Here are the main reasons why:

1) It’s unpleasant. Far too much of the procrastinator’s precious time is spent toiling in the Dark Playground, time that could have been spent enjoying satisfying, well-earned leisure if things had been done on a more logical schedule. And panic isn’t fun for anyone.

2) The procrastinator ultimately sells himself short. He ends up underachieving and fails to reach his potential, which eats away at him over time and fills him with regret and self-loathing.

3) The Have-To-Dos may happen, but not the Want-To-Dos. Even if the procrastinator is in the type of career where the Panic Monster is regularly present and he’s able to be fulfilled at work, the other things in life that are important to him—getting in shape, cooking elaborate meals, learning to play the guitar, writing a book, reading, or even making a bold career switch—never happen because the Panic Monster doesn’t usually get involved with those things. Undertakings like those expand our experiences, make our lives richer, and bring us a lot of happiness—and for most procrastinators, they get left in the dust.

So how can a procrastinator improve and become happier? See Part 2, How To Beat Procrastination

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My TED Talk on procrastination

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If you like Wait But Why, sign up for our email list and we’ll send you new posts when they come out.

To support Wait But Why, visit our Patreon page.

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Two related WBW posts:

Why you shouldn’t care what other people think. A different struggle going on in another part of your brain. Meet the mammoth.

A religion for the nonreligious. An even deeper look at the deal with the monkey and the other animals in your brain.


While they’re ruining your life, you might as well cuddle with them:

plushies ad for post

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712 comments

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  1. alvin Avatar
    alvin
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    Step one- harvest 4 scaffolds/templates from another industry.
    Step two- Run a prize pool to source content data through said structure's.
    Step three- debug.
    Step four- Outsource to a cheap third party agency for clean up and refinement.
    Step five- run a contrasting program from a future need for refinement.
    Step six- run an internal competition to find mistakes, with prize pools.
    Step seven- hire an interior decorator for content equilibrium.
    Step eight- launch.
    See eight easy steps to over thinking in the singularity of repetitive content

  2. Red Hood Avatar
    Red Hood
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    Did you ever get an adhd diagnosis?

  3. Howard Craft Avatar
    Howard Craft
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    Procrastination may seem like “pleasure seeking” over “work effort” but for many of us it is rooted in anxiety. Now maybe that’s partly because procrastination causes anxiety but I think there can be anxiety with regard to the work process itself. So to avoid that anxiety (not actually the task itself) we may seek alternative activities.

    My point is that learning to address anxiety may be more important than learning discipline.

    To help understand procrastination I try t look at when I practice it – the type of activities that I avoid.

    When attempting to end procrastination I look for ways to ease worry. Some of the tactics I use to help avoid procrastination (such as breaking a job down into smaller steps, or writing a schedule) are common but, for me at least, if my goal is to make the task less stressful I will tend to follow the tactics.

    The mind-set that I need to apply effort to stay on task tends to elevate my anxiety and tends to increase my desire to procrastinate.

  4. Harsh Kumar Avatar
    Harsh Kumar
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    I procrastinated reading this blog for 2 weeks. It just kept opened in one of my tabs(didn’t want to confront it I guess).
    I don’t know when it became chronic for me but it’s time to start making efforts.

  5. rostasi Avatar
    rostasi
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    I need to create my radio show, but I sat here and read this.

  6. olivia bolton Avatar
    olivia bolton
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    great

    1. olivia bolton Avatar
      olivia bolton
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      great…

  7. download Foxie 🔛 the app store Avatar

    i need to get my shit together

  8. Sven  Avatar
    Sven
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    Hi Tim. I want to think you! I’m going to take a course in time and priority management and discovered your TED talk as a part of the awareness process. I already knew I’m a 100% procrastinator but you made it clear to me this has an effect on the “no-deadline part” of my life. That being said I’m afraid to think about it and the consequences it will have if I start taking action. For the moment I guess I will remain in my procrastination comfort zone (or is this the monkey speaking?) and will start reading your posts at some point. Step one completed … I added your site to my favourites.

  9. Aline Rabago Guzman Avatar
    Aline Rabago Guzman
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    This is the best explanation of procrastination that I have ever read, I laugh a lot with the panic monster!!!! I remember being in that situation so many timeees, I really need to stop to procrastinate!!!

  10. Ryan Avatar
    Ryan
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    What if I kill the monkey

    1. Tannistha Avatar
      Tannistha
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      Except the monkey is like Voldemort and has to be killed by killing its ties with our mind, which probably makes it even more difficult than killing Voldy… 😛

  11. Mika Avatar
    Mika
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    I read the whole series of blog posts around a decade ago when I was in either late elementary or middle school. This entire time, I thought that my issue was procrastination, but it turned out that i just had really bad undiagnosed ADHD and needed help (I’m diagnosed now). If you relate to this more than on a few circumstances, it may be worth looking into an evaluation.

  12. MCT Avatar
    MCT
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    Please, please, Tim Urban and anyone who relates to this article: get
    yourself diagnosed for potential ADHD. This is a description of classic
    ADHD procrastination, NOT neurotypical behavior. I wish someone had
    pointed me in that direction when I saw myself in this post a decade
    ago.

    1. Richard Vankoppen Avatar
      Richard Vankoppen
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      Yeah your right, I got diagnosed at 26 years old and I had no idea ADHD was about executive functions I thought it was about hyper boys

  13. adam lucero Avatar
    adam lucero
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    Hi procrastinators – I’m looking for YOUR help…

    I have a coaching business where I help men kill procrastination & effortlessly take action in 30 days without falling back into their self-sabotaging patterns…

    And i’m looking to interview you strictly for market research, if you’re willing to sacrifice 15 minutes of your time to help.

    I will NOT pitch you – and in return can give you actionable tips to help you FEEL excited to take action.

    (I know you may find this hard to believe because you’ve tried everything – but it is possible for you to escape the vicious cycle)

    If you’re willing to help me, you can schedule a time that works best for you here:
    https://bit.ly/15minutefollowup

  14. Ash lynx Avatar
    Ash lynx
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    zamn really good article!

  15. NeNe Avatar
    NeNe
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    I cannot explain how much I related to this article! It was actually refreshing to read because it was so accurate! The “panic monster” popped out on me today, which has me rescheduling all of my activities tomorrow to complete an assignment that was due 3 days ago. Man! Glad to know I’m not alone.

    1. nicecocbro Avatar
      nicecocbro
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      “Man! Glad to know I’m not alone.”
      Congratulations! Apart from being a procastinator you’re seek validation too.

      1. autocorrect-bad Avatar
        autocorrect-bad
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        *you .

  16. Moa Avatar
    Moa
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    This is a really good article and probably one of the most relatable things i have read for a long while.

  17. Anju  Avatar
    Anju
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    I wrote an ode to productivity and picked a bone with procrastination here: why I’m not going to stop chasing productivity https://media0.giphy.com/media/18hwXXbrTpDws/giphy.gif

    P.S. As you can guess, I’m sharing my article on productivity here while procrastinating (sigh)

  18. Julian Avatar
    Julian
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    I’ve never seen such a unique take on procrastination, this is brilliant.

    To all my fellow procrastinators, the solution is taking action in bitesize amounts. We are FAR more likely to take action when we know something will only take 2 or 3 minutes. Our biggest mental hurdle is that we see the whole task at hand. This is what completely overwhelms us into action paralysis.

    I’m not exaggerating when I say that managing procrastination will change your entire life. It’s not something that goes away on it’s own, you essentially have to ‘re-program’ your subconscious mind. There’s an excellent guide by Virginia Griffiths on how to do this here – The key is to work with your brain, not against it. Hopefully helps somebody else out there. Peace.

  19. Lisa Percy Avatar
    Lisa Percy
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    I am selling an instant gratification monkey. any takers?

  20. insertname Avatar
    insertname
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    let’s all admit it: mostly everyone here is procrastinating while reading articles on procrastination. (me included. I have a multi-page assay due in a day, and I haven’t even started.)

    1. Steve Avatar
      Steve
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      Yep, this site is great for procrastination.

  21. Alexander Miller Avatar
    Alexander Miller
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    First time ever that an email enticed me to read a blog out of nowhere. Great email marketing. I am reading this for the first time today and I am blown away. Showing my fam and friends this. Much Love

  22. Thijs Anglim Avatar
    Thijs Anglim
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    I am a high school sophomore and I am deciding to put in more effort toward my future goals. In my Freshman year, I believe my biggest fault that kept me from working on my goals was simply fantasizing about these goals rather than physically working on them. The monkey was controlling me on the fact that the “deadline” for these goals was not relatively close, or was nonexistent.

    It has been clear that the “River Float” from the Dark Playground illustration in this post is my most frequently visited ride.

    I have been using journals to remind me about the tasks I desire to do. By spending time on future goals in tiny bits of time, I think physically working on these goals can become less forceful and more natural, and perhaps enter FLOW (which is explained in part 2).

  23. Pedro Castillo Avatar
    Pedro Castillo
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    Hello, fellow procrastinators!
    I hope this gets some exposure (you could help me by liking the comment)
    I’m an MBA student in Guatemala and right now I’m working on my thesis project.
    I’m interested in having interviews and conversations with people who deals and fights with procrastination every day… just like me.
    I really want to know the experiences of other people who openly admits they have a problem with procrastination (I haven’t found anyone that sincere outside the internet).
    This is not a test or experiment. I really need to know that there other people who are in need of help and hear their stories.
    This would help me a lot with the research of my target market.
    If you want to participate and have a conversation with me, please, send me a message to the address pjcastillo@ufm.edu and I would be glad to join you.
    Thank you!

  24. Ryan Joshi Avatar
    Ryan Joshi
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    One of my strategies for beating procrastination is I give the instant gratification monkey a specified amount of time to rule before I’m dismissing him. Of course the monkey will beg for more time, I sometimes give it 5-10 minute extensions that can add up to 30 minutes. I can control the monkey in most cases, though the monkey is very powerful whenever I’m trying to get out of bed.

    Once the monkey is gone, I can focus intensely on what I need to focus on. Also I am autistic with some ADHD symptoms.

  25. Ibrahim Ahmad Avatar
    Ibrahim Ahmad
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    Well your ted talk was even better…

  26. Dol Avatar
    Dol
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    Reading this article was both comforting and disturbing. You wrote my life and I felt naked. I even got up from the table from time to time and sat back. Unbelievable. I think I have ADHD, and I was thinking that a drug would fix it. You wrote the way out too, you’re awesome.

  27. jaj Avatar
    jaj
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    Does Procrastination happen more in ADHD people, like in ADHD minds there are 2 baby monkeys going crazy?

  28. olina Avatar
    olina
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    i think i have a small amount of unfair resentment toward this blog post–i thought my procrastination was just that: procrastination. this post validated that idea. i thought the only way i could fix this was to get into flow. i couldn’t do it. i know now that i have some pretty bad adhd.

    i discovered this post maybe four years ago, and if i knew that this was basically point blank defining adhd, i can’t help but think of how different my life would have been. i would’ve sought a diagnosis earlier, gotten on meds earlier, been more proactive.

    if you see this post and it reminds you of you, please look into adhd. a diagnosis might change your life.

    1. lauren Avatar
      lauren
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      I have the same timeline. I loved this blog because I thought someone finally understood me and my struggles and it wasn’t until several years later, after a random twitter thread hit my timeline, that I started to put the pieces together that the root of my problems is ADHD. I still haven’t figured out the right answer to deal with ADHD. In fact, I am supposed to be doing homework right this moment (I went back to school to advance my career) and my brain started wandering and wondering if the pressure of a deadline (the panic monster) has been shown to help people deal with ADHD. So I started googling instead of doing my homework which isn’t technically due until tomorrow at midnight, and then I remembered this post and I came here to see if Tim ever figured out that he has ADHD. I searched ADHD on this site but didn’t see any posts about it… I could dive much deeper now that I am here, but I should really get back to my homework…or at least try.

    2. Ryan Joshi Avatar
      Ryan Joshi
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      I’m autistic and have a lot of ADHD symptoms. I do use meds and they help me stay focused once I fight off the instant gratification monkey.

      My strategy for beating the monkey is: I will give the monkey a certain amount of time to rule, and once that time is up, I will force out the monkey (though the monkey sometimes succeeds in extending their rule).

  29. kalil Avatar
    kalil
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    people need to know that making money and being an athlete is very hard

  30. jack symlwih Avatar
    jack symlwih
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    crazy shit happen when pro athleths in the programming field of the masses start to learn the trade and get the training on it

  31. Eleven Avatar
    Eleven
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    Was crying/feeling $hit about my procrastination because a superior called me out as to why I am always late to work, but this comic has made me feel better/less worthless/of a failure about it!

    I am only human & have deeply rooted flaws & trauma, as any human. I’m doing/trying my best! ????????‍♀️

  32. Gary Keyes Avatar
    Gary Keyes
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    Boy, I really need this right now in my life.

  33. cooljeba Avatar
    cooljeba
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    This Article turned my life around for good. I thought i was a lazy person, but behind the mask it was actually Procrastination.
    I read this article before the TED talk happened, nevertheless, one of the best article ever on internet.

  34. Chenming Song Avatar
    Chenming Song
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    Downloaded this Ted talk from ted.com, watched it over and over again, always entertains and keeps me alive.

  35. Robin Avatar
    Robin
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    You wouldn’t happen to have ADHD?

  36. Carey Avatar
    Carey
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    Just discovered site…. Absolutely hits the nail on the head. And the 4th grade drawings are so effing funny. My husband and I not only agree with your assessments (mostly) but about pee ourselves laughing at the drawings. I do have a suggestion for your store – a coffee mug with instant gratification monkey since he’s the one keeping me from getting off my ass and not being late! Perfect!

    Thanks for your insights and awesome artwork!! Keep it up!

  37. Emmy Fallen Avatar
    Emmy Fallen
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    This article really hit the nail on the head! You pointed out exactly our problems in an amusing way! Thank you! This is my favorite website lately! Btw, I’ve procrastinated reading this for 3 months 🙁

  38. Daksh Saini Avatar
    Daksh Saini
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    Yeah, instead on working on a project which is due over morrow I’m here in the Dark Playground

  39. ifisayimbusyimreadingmanga Avatar
    ifisayimbusyimreadingmanga
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    Yes, instead of learning for that hard math test which will occur tomorrow (and tomorrow is 39 minutes away) I’m here in the dark playground, helpless and I really don’t get math at all. I will probably fail but I can’t get away from here.

  40. Marcos Avatar
    Marcos
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    This is my Memento Mori, made with 987 pieces of wood. With 144 holes to place goals and achievements. Thank Tim for this idea!! https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/b1e6d28af30fa2396a0c868e96cb891651a2cafba058e470a2091ca28e7aa88a.jpg

  41. louis Avatar
    louis
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    Reading this article was procrastinating in my case 😉
    But it’s very interesting! Love how you impersonate our different psychic institutions with funny little characters, they always magnificently correspond to what they represent. This way of representing with stories mixed with pictures gives a great memory anchoring!

  42. Kimiya Kamalabadi Avatar
    Kimiya Kamalabadi
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    I read this years ago, and after being diagnosed with ADHD-C, came back to reread it. It’s so painfully accurate!

  43. Draven Carelock Avatar
    Draven Carelock
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    I also have this problem.

  44. Angad Ranhotra Avatar
    Angad Ranhotra
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    The TED x TALK, but in an article. Exactly what I needed. Thank you

  45. D.A. Avatar
    D.A.
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    I don’t see the map of weeks in 90 years here from the TED…was hoping to add enough weeks to make it 120ish years and print it out and color them in as they go. Any link to that beautiful, artsy grid of squares?

    1. Stephanie Avatar
      Stephanie
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      you mean like this?shorturl.at/bpMT3 or even this: shorturl.at/bfBMZ

      1. D.A. Avatar
        D.A.
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        I just see an add for short URL and invite to go premium. Thanks for trying.

    2. Paul Avatar
      Paul
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      I think you might be looking for the article “Your Life in Weeks” on this website.

      1. D.A. Avatar
        D.A.
        Hide

        thanks!

  46. eric802 Avatar
    eric802
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    No joke – I’ve had this article bookmarked since 2014 and I just got around to reading it. Me and that monkey are tight.

    1. Emmy Fallen Avatar
      Emmy Fallen
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      I started reading this 3 months ago and I’ve just finished it 2 minutes ago! Procrastination is actually no joke!

  47. Mostakim Ahamed Avatar
    Mostakim Ahamed
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    this speech is really good man. very very informative for my instant gratification monkey

  48. he he he Avatar
    he he he
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    Right now you are procrastinating. Yes, you. Get off the comments page.

    1. nope Avatar
      nope
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      but i don’t want to

      1. ArduinoBen Avatar
        ArduinoBen
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        correct 🙁

    2. TaylorTLB Avatar
      TaylorTLB
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      I am actually writing an analysis about this article and the ted talk so one could say reading the comments is me just doing more research

    3. Ola Aremu Avatar
      Ola Aremu
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      yeah…

  49. Anna H Avatar
    Anna H
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    Love this article though I never get around to actually read it, it’s on my to-do-list since a few years back. One day it will happen! I will read the whole thing! 😀 Any day now…

  50. Aris Adamantiadis Avatar
    Aris Adamantiadis
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    I’m getting diagnosed for ADHD next week. I’ve read this blog post 8 years ago, and I wish I knew about ADHD back then. Mentioning ADHD in your post or TED speech would have saved me years of struggle and self-blame.

    1. Paul Avatar
      Paul
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      No need to be disagreeable about it, presenting it as his fault seems pretty disproportionate. He can’t just be omniscient about his viewers’ and readers’ problems, nor can he list all illnesses and disorders that could ever cause procrastination !

      1. Anonymous Avatar
        Anonymous
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        I don’t think their comment necessarily means it’s Tim’s fault, and he might not know to begin with. But I agree with their comment, in that I wish I had read a comment or note in the post stating ADHD is a thing. Especially the remark that non-procrastinators don’t exist made me think everything was fine, and maybe it really is true, but I think there’s a line to be drawn, because maybe everyone does procrastinate to a certain extent, but something that causes executive dysfunction (like ADHD) is not the same as procrastinating on a hobby you want to do but don’t care about for instance.

        I don’t think he needed to list all illnesses and disorders that cause procrastination. And I don’t think it’s necessarily a long list.

  51. Benjamin Reed Avatar
    Benjamin Reed
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    I’m procrastinating while I’m reading this.

    1. Laniel Avatar
      Laniel
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      We all are

  52. Lucifer Chase Avatar
    Lucifer Chase
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    I have watched your ted talk on this topic. Amazing thing man.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=arj7oStGLkU

  53. A H Avatar
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    Hey, Tim. Thanks for sharing this post! I love that the Instant Gratification Monkey’s suggestions come in waves, since in reality, we get drawn up to “check sock prices on amazon” from initially considering “watching YouTube videos on deep sea creatures”. I agree that the human mind is so easily manipulated by the Monkey. Thanks so much for this sweet article!

  54. ArnaBjorg Arnadottir Avatar
    ArnaBjorg Arnadottir
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    Thank you for this!! perfect descriptions 😀

  55. AL Avatar
    AL
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    Wow! What a great article! Sometimes I don’t even know how badly I am procrastinating, all of the things mentioned in this article really pointed out things that happen to me. Being a procrastinator is so hard, I never get anything done in a timely matter and I find myself being more stressed out. When reading this, it really made me realize how bad I do it and want to fix it.

  56. Sara Johnson Avatar
    Sara Johnson
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    So, the RDM is the prefrontal cortex and the IGM is the limbic system. What is the Panic Monster? The amygdala?

  57. Mr. Staircase Avatar
    Mr. Staircase
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    never before has an article called me out so hard

  58. alfrinscha Avatar
    alfrinscha
    Hide

    I think procrastination is part of ADHD. I personally believe I have ADHD because I always read posts about it and can relate so much to it. Then I did my research (when I was in high school) and found out the symptoms of inattentive ADHD type basically describe me and also looking back to my childhood self until then, I realized that I actually might have ADHD. No one would’ve known that if I didn’t realize it in the first place and try to understand it. Until now I still don’t know what’s going on up there in my brain, right now it’s just cloudy and yes I’m procrastinating because the monkey decided I need to read this again (I read it years ago and like a few days ago and the monkey was like ‘why don’t you read it again just because’).

    1. Emerson Lee Avatar
      Emerson Lee
      Hide

      Yeah same, I read this years ago and I related to it. And I tried to figure out how to not procrastinate for years, but all that time I had no idea I had ADHD or how executive dysfunction works biologically–I thought it was all a personal failing. I didn’t even process the fact that not everyone procrastinates like I do. I only got diagnosed 1 month ago! It’s sad reading this again and knowing the first few times I read it I had no idea my issues were related to ADHD, because getting diagnosed earlier would have helped me so much.

      I am glad to hear you found out you have ADHD too, because that is a big deal and it’s really good that we know these things now. 😀 Good luck getting back on task, I am rooting for you!

      1. alfrinscha Avatar
        alfrinscha
        Hide

        Thank you, i’m really glad i did too. It’s just easier when i know what i’m up against so i can handle with the right way. Actually i don’t know if I’m handling it right or not but I’m planning to always learn more about it.
        Good luck for you too, we got this:)

    2. ArnaBjorg Arnadottir Avatar
      ArnaBjorg Arnadottir
      Hide

      Yes I to have gotten a ADHD diagnosis late in life and I have connected this Dark playground as is described so perfectly here to that. Just the realization that it is not just me being lazy, stupid an incompetent but actually a diagnosis that is possible to get help with has helped me immensely.

    3. Kuba4ful Avatar
      Kuba4ful
      Hide

      Btw even if you have ADHD, it’s still possible to fight procrastination by yourself, without any medication. Yes, it’s harder than for normal people, but it’s still doable if you restrict yourself accordingly.

      Source: I have ADHD (diagnosed by psychiatrist) and I stopped taking methylphenidate-based medication (meant to help with focusing) about a year ago. I struggle to fight procrastination much more without it, but I can still do work if I impose deadlines and punishments upon myself.

      What worked for me: after every meal I need to write at least 400 words of a novel I’m writing in 30 minutes. If I don’t manage to do it, I forbid myself from playing my favourite game till tomorrow. I’m doing this for about two weeks and I didn’t have to punish myself yet. But humans brain is still weird, because after writing the minimum of 400 words I immediately lose my focus and start paying attention to different things. Also it really irregulated my eat periods. Now I eat about two meals a day and only when I’m really hungry. That’s how much my monkey doesn’t want to leave.

      Also this method may not work for you, but it worked pretty well for me. Actually most of these guides about fighting procrastination is just people describing what worked for them.

      1. Nkululeko Tony Jason Tutani Avatar
        Nkululeko Tony Jason Tutani
        Hide

        If you really suffered from procrastination, you wouldn’t be able to follow the rules. You would just come up with an excuse.

        1. Kuba4ful Avatar
          Kuba4ful
          Hide

          After 4 months I can tell that sadly, it didn’t work in the long run. At first I managed to keep up with it for about 3-4 weeks, but it started annoying me. It even go to the point that I’ve started skipping my meals really often. And one day I just was too tired, and thought that I will just write 800 words after next meal. And, as you can probably guess, I didn’t do that. And I started procrastinating again.

          I tried other methods (task rpg games, rewarding instead of punishing etc) but all of them worked up to two weeks. And I’ve also been doing the bare minimum I set to myself. About a month ago I got my medication (methylphenidate) prescribed again, and I can tell that nothing can beat taking meds. I still struggle to start doing the work I should, but once I start, I can’t stop. I can’t even take focus from what I’m doing and even do it for few hours without break.

          Sadly, taking meds also has it’s side effects. Mainly lack of apetite, and after their effect wears off I start feeling sad and anxious. My relationship was hurt by this, so now I’m taking them semi-regularly.

          Fighting your brain is really, really hard. And with ADHD, it’s even harder. I would say it’s impossible without meds but I know it’s possible, since I did it for few weeks. But, as I sad before, if you’ve got ADHD, nothing can beat taking your meds.

          1. Nkululeko Tony Jason Tutani Avatar
            Nkululeko Tony Jason Tutani
            Hide

            That’s a heartfelt story… Its rather interesting that anything that leads to higher levels of focus causes feelings of sadness and anxiety. Coffee and energy drinks are huge culprits

          2. Diane Avatar
            Diane
            Hide

            Kuba4ful, your last comment that “nothing can beat taking your meds” struck me, as I wondered if you’ve ever looked at diet and nutrition. Many, many parents have helped or even “cured” their kids by such means. Sometimes getting off wheat (gluten) makes a huge difference. Some of the main effects of gluten are neurological. You can look up TED Talks, other videos, do Internet searches, etc. to learn more about that. There’s a YT channel called “What I’ve Learned” that puts some of this information into concise videos…I love it! You could also look up Trudy Scott who focuses a lot on nutritional cures for brain problems. And there are hundreds more all over the Internet!

            Otherwise, you should search “supplements for ADHD” and/or join some FB groups that emphasize natural approaches. There are thousands of people who reject the idea that only medication can help. It might help in the short term but it doesn’t address the real problem, which is sometimes a diet/nutrition issue. Plus, medications always cause other problems sooner or later. You’ve proven that already. Your body is not deficient in methylphenidate. 🙂

            Even just a good fish oil might do great things for you. I recommend this one that I use: https://smile.amazon.com/Nordic-Naturals-Strawberry-Extra-1000Mg/dp/B00E029IIO/. Great for brain function, mood, and other health benefits as well. There are also herbs that can help, but a lot of our brain function depends on having the right nutrients. Many vitamins are hard to get from our food, even if you eat “perfectly”–and who does? You need plenty of protein, good fats, lots of veggies, low sugar, etc. and that alone can make a big difference for some, but food is grown on deficient soils and those missing minerals are also a big problem.

            I’ll stop before this gets too long, but I hope you’ll pursue some of those paths. I have corrected virtually all my health problems in this way. Personal research and focusing on natural foods, vitamins, and therapies. I wish you well!! (From a fellow procrastinator…still trying to learn what works for me!)

            1. Oliver Avatar
              Oliver
              Hide

              I’m sure your comment was well-meaning… But I really have to plead with you to be more careful with claims like that. You said that meds “don’t address the real problem which is a diet/nutrition issue”. Sigh.. There is as of yet absolutely no scientific evidence that ADHD can be caused by a diet. Given what we know about ADHD and it being a mostly genetic neurobiological disorder it’s also incredibly unlikely. Look if you want to believe something despite their being no evidence but actually loads of counter evidence supported by decades of scientific research then you go ahead and do that… Real actual ADHD is a proper disability and therefore your claims can be incredibly harmful to the point of destroying lives. Especially because you’re talking about them with such confidence. I implore you to be more considerate and look if you really have to, try and say things like. “Hey I know there is only little scientific evidence to support this but I found that this helped myself and my kid”. Because there are some studies that have shown moderate improvements in some kids ADHD symptoms so that’s a comment you can make.

          3. Ryan Joshi Avatar
            Ryan Joshi
            Hide

            I take meds and I can definitely confirm that they make it harder to eat and sleep

      2. GuiGui Avatar
        GuiGui
        Hide

        SO accurate thanks

  59. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    This kind of thing always happens to me. I usually have a bunch of work to do and the professor would give us lots of time to work it, so I had this paper due in about 2 weeks, and my brain was just carefree for about 12 days, but when I realized that it was due in about 2 days, my panic monster just kicks in and starts screaming about how my paper was due in 2 days, and that I should start working before I get in trouble, so I managed to pull through in 2 days, and get the paper done, and the professor and came up to me and said it was the best in all of the class, and I was surprised I had actually gotten one of the best marks in the class. This article and this guy were so much related to me. Fantastic article.

  60. Anonymous Hooman  Avatar
    Anonymous Hooman
    Hide

    @gloriaanneoconnell:disqus The panic monster is a natural phenomenon, and It’s really just part of the human brain. It never stops kicking in.

    1. Elise Marchand Avatar
      Elise Marchand
      Hide

      How I wish that were true… but after a time, if I rely on the Panic Monster too much, he stops being an effective motivator. Then all I’m left with is the Self-Loathing Monster, and the monkey isn’t scared of that.

  61. samsung led Avatar
    samsung led
    Hide

    A round of applause for your mind blowing article. Much thanks to you. Fantastic.

  62. w Avatar
    w
    Hide

    Reading this post is part of the dark playground

    1. HopingSeeker Avatar
      HopingSeeker
      Hide

      The part on you can choose childish playing, or live your life. You can choose

      1. Pedro Batista Marconi Avatar
        Pedro Batista Marconi
        Hide

        Agree with both of you. This part of dark playground seems like a billboard at the end of playground explaining the rules of the place e inviting you to the near way out.

  63. Sam Nickerson Avatar
    Sam Nickerson
    Hide

    The instant gratification monkey brought me here

  64. Gloria Anne O'Connell Avatar
    Gloria Anne O’Connell
    Hide

    I have a question though. What is the panic monster stops kicking in?

    1. Aris Adamantiadis Avatar
      Aris Adamantiadis
      Hide

      Your work performance drops below what you’d think is acceptable level. You get fired or get depressed because you think you’re better than that. Been there, done that got the t-shirt, 0/10 I don’t recommend it.

      Get tested for ADD or ADHD.

      1. nope Avatar
        nope
        Hide

        ohhhhh boy. You Just Fail. My panic monster kicks in and then the IGM isn’t scared by it and so I become a nervous wreck who procrastinates for hours and then has to beg my professors for an extension to pull an all nighter to get three term assignments done in 18 hours.

        1. nope Avatar
          nope
          Hide

          you see I did actually get the term assignments done decently well, even impressed my professor but oh boy was it stressful

  65. Borg Avatar
    Borg
    Hide

    I’m not generally a procrastinator, but “The Dark Playground” is a perfect description for where I go during performance review time. Everything else I can either motivate myself to do or convince myself isn’t a priority, but my story says that I’m not going to be able to write my self-review or peer reviews even though undeniably I will need to.

  66. Michelle Garcia Avatar
    Michelle Garcia
    Hide

    I’d never read about procrastination that way…. wow. Thanks for sharing

  67. Mariana S. Pereira Avatar
    Mariana S. Pereira
    Hide

    Something funny happened. I was procastinating when I found your video on TED. Not just procastinating, I was procastinating in a university thesis and I can see myself in this video, which makes me laugh sadly.

  68. Ansari Asad Avatar
    Ansari Asad
    Hide

    You are simply amazing! I have never read articles on this subject, matter that made so much sense.
    Parvez

  69. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    I’m not sure if anybody has ever told you this, but I am really pretty sure you have ADHD. (From somebody who totally identifies. When I read about ADHD I found it described me to a T (there are different forms, but in the way your post describes)). Doesn’t exactly solve the problem, but its good to know and work with!

    1. Anonymous Avatar
      Anonymous
      Hide

      A book I recommend is: The Disorganized Mind: Coaching Your ADHD Brain to Take Control of Your Time, Tasks, and Talents. (Of course to be honest I haven’t really coached my brain to take control yet because thats easier read-about than done, but reading it made me sure that I have ADHD and it does provide good tips)

      1. ArnaBjorg Arnadottir Avatar
        ArnaBjorg Arnadottir
        Hide

        thanks for the recomendation

  70. Bruno Berdinaci Avatar
    Bruno Berdinaci
    Hide

    People these days surely love their phones and spend most of their day online.
    And, they love money. There are literally websites which offer free money, and it takes
    like five seconds to click and solve captcha, and a small amount pours in your account.
    And people don’t do it. They would rather spend five more seconds on the Dark Playground,
    then earn money which they desire. Why? Because amounts are small- Yeah but your phone is next to you
    all the time and it will pill up in next, let’s say 3 months. But 3 months??? Three months of structured
    activity and self organization?? But that means I will have to leave Dark Playground every hour or so for
    5 seconds?!!! I played one of these games few years ago, and quit in 5 days.
    Then I tried again last year – 8 days. This year I made a WRITTEN PLAN and DECIDED to STICK TO IT.
    It was a well designed plan, day by day, 2 month period – and it paid off.
    You can also try it, I’ll put a link. Register to the site, write your self a few month DETAILED,
    REASONABLE plan (on paper preferably), and try to stick to it!
    link

  71. Katharine Betteridge Avatar
    Katharine Betteridge
    Hide

    Such a good illustration. The problem is I have another monster though – when I run to in the forest of work I of work there exists the self-loathing monster which tells me that my work is no good *as I am doing it*. It is equally, if not as scary as the panic monster and is the primary reason I procrastinate. Not because of the monkey distraction, but becuase I fear facing the self-loathing monster in the woods of work.

    1. Lorenzo Cabason Avatar
      Lorenzo Cabason
      Hide

      That’s your procrastination monkey whispering in the woods “what’s the point of doing the work if it won’t be perfect or good” “No one will like it, and you don’t want to be disliked right? Better not do it then” I have the same issue.fml…

      1. Pinkdino Avatar
        Pinkdino
        Hide

        That is a good explanation. I have the same problem and in addition I have one more problem. I usually don’t let my time be wasted timing wasting shows or social media. I don’t go there since I know its a dark playground. But whenever I start studying my mind brings out some important issues from my past which makes me believe that are having more priority than my studies and I get distracted and keep over thinking about same and same problem.

  72. Jesse Avatar
    Jesse
    Hide

    What about the people who deny themselves any gratification and are always working, aka workaholics? I wonder where they fit..?

  73. Alain van Bielert Avatar
    Alain van Bielert
    Hide

    I’ve got bigger issues…
    https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/4595cf6e423274a40c2c072769f28868daa98b6dfe56a63b1fea5d673cf1ba0f.jpg

  74. grrrrrrrr Avatar
    grrrrrrrr
    Hide

    STOP READING THE COMMENTS

    1. Aiden  Avatar
      Aiden
      Hide

      Damn I needed thhis. Thank you lol.

    2. Anonymous Avatar
      Anonymous
      Hide

      ????????

  75. Dark Place Avatar
    Dark Place
    Hide

    like holy moly he’s got the sense of a God that monkey tho, I didn’t even realize he was the captain now. Then came the Panic monster. like God dang.

  76. Rachel campos-jaimes Avatar
    Rachel campos-jaimes
    Hide

    Most of the time I don’t even notice I do it, never was able to focus properly always distracted by more pleasant or something more interesting good or bad. I was always told I had ADHD but sometimes I go back and forth wondering if that’s why my mind bounces everywhere at once.

  77. Jamieslee Rivera Avatar
    Jamieslee Rivera
    Hide

    I’m the same When I want to do my work no matter how hard I try I get distracted fast and lose the due date for my work.

  78. Libby Graham Avatar
    Libby Graham
    Hide

    Do you know how many times I have read this article when I am supposed to be working 🙂 It’s truly beyond counting. It’s 11:23am and I am in the office on a Saturday. I can go home when I finish my work. Have I started? No. I’m sitting here, reading your article (again) and bonding with my instant gratification monkey

  79. Darren Ryan Avatar
    Darren Ryan
    Hide

    Wow, this is me, I came online to book train tickets, and here I am, posting on one of your wonderful articles 🙂

  80. gdmellott Avatar
    Hide

    The bottom line in “my book” is that we have internally seriously noted that we are being lied to in a vast number of areas that are significant factors in making a sober decision. Isolating ourselves into just our personal views drops the ball even more in any serious endeavor at seeking and executing the best course for our posterity’s sake. Where we get that getting even worse is where people get addicted in a substance abuse situation that leans to breaking down the relations processes needed to have a proper building up of each other. A wiser way to go may be to use the Internet to help people build health checks of the communities we are affecting by the things we do. This may even develop into the likes of a Federation of States (/~small counties~) for healthy relations that may focus on supplying relevant information to the world in such inter-relating factors and help us find the best solutions for us that let us use our individual resources as wisely as possible.

    PS: Emotions are just simple resource management tools that help us survive a situation in the short term. We need deeper analysis for a healthier result to get a solid footing in reality’s fullest ways of relating.

  81. ACuriousMind Avatar
    ACuriousMind
    Hide

    Extremely simple and correct explanation. This is exactly the case with me. Procrastinating from two days instead of studying for an exam gotta start soon(that’s what I keep saying to myself) and btw the exam is in about 12 hours.

    1. Kristanila Jain Avatar
      Kristanila Jain
      Hide

      That’s /exactly/ me, except I’m working on an essay that’s already late. I’m trying, but I’m a failure. My writing speed is about two sentences an hour, tops. The panic monster doesn’t even faze me anymore. My life is a mess.

      1. Robin Wang Avatar
        Robin Wang
        Hide

        SAME! my final paper already passed the ddl but I’m even procrastinate to reply to the Prof’s extension email… fear of letting him and myself down again for not capable of finishing it on time…again.

  82. Becki Avatar
    Becki
    Hide

    Oh, this is spot on!! Love this!
    “I’m a procrastinator with a perfectionist complex. I will be awesome…some day”

  83. Kyoshirou Kazuya Avatar
    Kyoshirou Kazuya
    Hide

    Hi. I watched your Ted talk last year and was amused by it.
    Today, i rewatched your TedTalk again and you know what.
    I have TWO DAYS BEFORE THE DEADLINE OF MY DOCUMENTATION.
    Thank you. The monkey stupidly guided me to watch the video again and the panic monster came out.
    The screaming in my brain is plesurable.

    1. Robin Wang Avatar
      Robin Wang
      Hide

      Exactly! Feeling great for the panic screaming but sometimes the panic pressure crumbled when out of due… it sucks to admit it’s a problem and can’t win the fight against it.

  84. Laura Cabral Avatar
    Laura Cabral
    Hide

    I am procrastinating right now…

  85. Laura Cabral Avatar
    Laura Cabral
    Hide

    I am procrastinating right now…

    1. imwithstoopid Avatar
      imwithstoopid
      Hide

      Yo, I’ll get back to ya sometime later.

  86. Armin Avatar
    Armin
    Hide

    I don´t know, somebody should check the sensitivity to dopamine in non/procratinators. Sapolsky (yes I watch his lectures when I procrastinate on byrocratic tasks) says dopamine surge is highest at people anticipating reward

  87. ann Avatar
    ann
    Hide

    Sometimes i feel like my gratification monkey helps my panic monster relax as well!! I am not one to bother too much about marks..I feel like working I work..as simple as that..although I suppose living in “The Human World” I cannot really fit in. If my gratification monkey feels like learning something different.. He doesn’t even give a damn about the submissions pending for tomorrow…my rational decision maker is struggling like hell..since I lost a year because of my impulsiveness…and i have yet to learn a lesson !! Infact I ended up surprising all my teachers since I failed my exams inspite of being among the bright students !! The worst part is when I have to work in a group..there is no one more dedicated than me..since I do not like being held responsible for the group..wish I could say the same about myself !!
    Although I am glad that I am not the only one…

    1. pinkdino Avatar
      pinkdino
      Hide

      I can empathies buddy. Going through the same…

  88. Nick Pan Avatar
    Nick Pan
    Hide

    Here’s a related article, focusing on our hesitation during that last moment right before pulling the trigger to start. He calls it “micro-ambivalence”.
    https://www.jimhjort.com/articles/micro-ambivalence-freezing-up-in-the-moment-of-truth

  89. Nick Pan Avatar
    Nick Pan
    Hide

    I just caught my monkey in the act of grabbing the wheel.

    I think my monkey craves flow, which is why I’m tempted to switch to doing something that gives that feeling *ASAP*, like playing a game or checking social media. The icky work of breaking a project into tasks (and just f***ing getting started) is like having to shop for ingredients and then cook when you’re already hungry. That said, the resulting “prepared meal” flow is so much more satisfying than “fast food” flow. 🙂

  90. ;) Avatar
    😉
    Hide

    I’d like to throw another perspective in the mix. I watched this video by Louis Rossmann and it resonated. His view is that procrastination is a natural response to exert free will. It is synonymous to learning to say no to your parents.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9UwOdFzPTH4

  91. Aro Rin Avatar
    Aro Rin
    Hide

    How can this little monkey be so playful? The last few days I’ve been scrutinizing the scenes from the movie Apocalypto, something I’ve done several times before. I must have seen Ghostbusters for the twentieth time and a host of other nonsense that just laughed a lot to ease the blame for wasting so much time.

    1. Alice Miller Bishoff Avatar
      Alice Miller Bishoff
      Hide

      I LOVE Apocalypto!

  92. Aro Rin Avatar
    Aro Rin
    Hide

    Great! You finally clarified this problem that has plagued me for many years. I’m almost 60 years old! It took a lot of panic monsters to do everything I could. But now I’m starting many new activities with the urgent need to rebuild my value network … I can’t waste any more time on this little monkey. You are right. Only true procrastinators will understand how much your article is worth. Thank you so much!

  93. Herman Ellis Avatar
    Herman Ellis
    Hide

    There are however some positive aspects to procrastination. One is that the postponement allows you to gather more information – which leads to a better decision. There is however a cutoff point where if you may have too much information which can lead to confusion.

    1. Don Avatar
      Don
      Hide

      …except i’ve been procrastinating since 2006, do I have enough information yet?

      1. Kyoshirou Kazuya Avatar
        Kyoshirou Kazuya
        Hide

        Here to tell you how you made me laugh.

  94. Applebootay Avatar
    Applebootay
    Hide

    Finally!!! someone who understands me. I’m in the midst of trolling FB at work while work requests are piling up and FY19 deadline is tomorrow. And I just can’t…I know I procrastinate and I can’t help it…I do believe it’s ADD…I decided to google “why do people procrastinate” and found this article….Now I’m deciding if I should watch the Ted Talk or do some work….SMDH

    1. Don Avatar
      Don
      Hide

      This isn’t an article, its a very long meme!

      1. Applebootay Avatar
        Applebootay
        Hide

        HA!

  95. Jenna Jones Avatar
    Jenna Jones
    Hide

    The Dark Playground is the best freakin’ mind picture. I LIVE there. I am there RIGHT NOW.

  96. HeyyyIt'sMal Avatar
    HeyyyIt’sMal
    Hide

    definitely not procrastinating my essay by reading this post about procrastination…

  97. :) Avatar
    🙂
    Hide

    I find it very ironic that I am reading this post when I am supposed to be vacuuming the carpets because I have been putting it off for weeks, and I have 2 hairy dogs shedding everyehere(not helpful, guys). I was getting ready to start but I thought, hmm, maybe I will goof around a little.
    😀

    1. Don Avatar
      Don
      Hide

      Hey, first thing tomorrow…!

  98. Jan Calliauw Avatar
    Jan Calliauw
    Hide

    I’ll read the solutions soon.

  99. Neeraj Agnihotri Avatar

    I have procrastinated for years and the worst part is that I felt it was normal. With years of attention deficiency, we are wired to procrastinate again and again.
    http://www.neerajagnihotri.com

    1. Applebootay Avatar
      Applebootay
      Hide

      I definitely believe its a form of ADHD or ADD

  100. Jack M Avatar
    Jack M
    Hide

    I learned two semesters of geology in 3 hours once…

    1. Jason B Avatar
      Jason B
      Hide

      lol. Not a chance.

  101. rainbowwildliferescue Avatar
    rainbowwildliferescue
    Hide

    Do you know that you described ADHD to the T?

  102. Brian Himmelstrup Nielsen Avatar

    One problem though, is that the panic monster doesn’t appear when people are suffering from depression (unless its absolutely life threathening).
    Still i would like to extend my gratitude for this article and TED video, since i still feel it helps a lot.
    thank you so much!

    1. Don Avatar
      Don
      Hide

      I’ve been watching Ted video’s for ten years, when do they stop…I have things to do…

  103. mcgern Avatar
    mcgern
    Hide

    So depressing when someone you have never met can outline your life like they’ve been living in your head. I am procrastinating by reading an article about procrastination, and it has absolutely nailed me, got my number, described me to a T.

    Now to read part 2 and quell the instant gratification monkey.

    1. ?????¿ Avatar
      ?????¿
      Hide

      I find the beautiful drawing skills depressing…

  104. James Avatar
    James
    Hide

    Send help! I think my panic monster is dead. Any suggestions on how to revive him?

  105. Shons Avatar
    Shons
    Hide

    Haha your TED talk was pretty epic. Funnily enough, I actually came across it because I saw you in a Netflix doco (the flat earth) because I was procrastinating from my uni work which I have to do and I’m like, WTF there is a doco on flat earth people, shit I have to watch this. So I did. Still need to do my literature review on atmospheric pollutants and how land and sea breeze influences them.

    Oh right anyway, how I got here – was like oh cool science writer, googled, TED talk later. Anyway, I really should get back to that lit review.

  106. Asad Meah Avatar
    Hide

    Just Do it – Take action, don’t think.

    1. dcard88 Avatar
      dcard88
      Hide

      Have to plan the action first. I’ll get to that after I check the market again. Can’t take a chance on wasting any of my valuable Facebook time by doing wasted work, so have to plan everything a little extra to prevent any inefficient work.

  107. Ben Guidot Avatar
    Ben Guidot
    Hide

    Just ran across your TED talk and now this website, perhaps I have done it backward. In any case I am supposed to be working on a paper. Thanks for the motivation.

  108. Yo Jack Avatar
    Yo Jack
    Hide

    I am literally procrastinating by reading this and now heading to the TED talk….

  109. Annabella Li Avatar
    Annabella Li
    Hide

    Dear god, when did I develop a sense of humor?

  110. Annabella Li Avatar
    Annabella Li
    Hide

    this blogger is very smart- he knows that 99.99% of people come here to procrastinate so a post about procrastination would resonate with everyone since everyone here probably has a procrastination problem

  111. Annabella Li Avatar
    Annabella Li
    Hide

    I wonder how many people came here to procrastinate only to find…this

  112. Monkey see monkey do Avatar
    Monkey see monkey do
    Hide

    This is an extremely accurate post to how my mind works except for one thing. What should I do if my instant gratification monkey isn’t afraid of the panic monster, so they coexist together in one big confusing scene, where I know I have to do it, and panic is setting in, and I keep telling myself that im going to do it, but every time the monkey is given an opportunity, it takes hold again, and sends everything to hell?

  113. Bob Kaspar Avatar
    Bob Kaspar
    Hide

    This looks like an interesting article. I think I’ll read it later.

  114. shruthi Avatar
    shruthi
    Hide

    Totally loved it!
    Totally can relate to it!
    Totally going to eradicate my procrastination… Especially the ones without deadlines – I will start doing something about them

  115. Teacher Sikhumbuzo Moyo Avatar
    Teacher Sikhumbuzo Moyo
    Hide

    amazing presentations ever—wow

    not a procrastinator anymore

  116. Teacher Sikhumbuzo Moyo Avatar
    Teacher Sikhumbuzo Moyo
    Hide

    Hi Tim enjoying your Ted talk so much, please send me those slides

  117. Dan Avatar
    Dan
    Hide

    What I love most about this post is that it was almost certainly created by someone while procrastinating an actual project.

  118. Ananya Kaur Avatar
    Ananya Kaur
    Hide

    But what do you do if the panic minster never comes or if the monkey is no longer afraid of it ?What then?

  119. Ter Avatar
    Ter
    Hide

    Some of those goals you are avoiding are not actually “your” goals…”should do´s” and “must do´s” are quite different from “want do´s”. I don´t have much gratification from completed tasks of either category. Usually it is just relief it is done. I don´t know, somebody should check the sensitivity to dopamine in non/procratinators. Sapolsky (yes I watch his lectures when I procrastinate on byrocratic tasks) says dopamine surge is highest at people anticipating reward (especialy when the chance is 50/50). If a person is more sensitive to dopamine his/hers motivation kicks in just when anticipating reward and it is enough to propel that person towards the goal. Less sensitive people might really need that panic monster which not only introduces fear of failure, but also a kind of a thrill that makes me doubt the rational decision maker really takes over…

  120. Eric Nicholls Avatar
    Eric Nicholls
    Hide

    When it comes to the life boxes, you used a 90 year life. However, it could be less because we don’t know if we’re even going to make it that long.

  121. Eric Nicholls Avatar
    Eric Nicholls
    Hide

    Dude, I loved your Ted Talk. I feel that you somehow read my mind. I also blame technology. Now I can browse the world while laying in bed with my phone. And my monkey loves Instagram, 9GAG, Wikipedia, Youtube, NETFLIX, etc.

    1. Paco Rabitti Avatar
      Paco Rabitti
      Hide

      Dude! I didn’t know 9GAG. Now I will procrastinate even more

      1. Eric Nicholls Avatar
        Eric Nicholls
        Hide

        Be careful, 9GAG is like a time machine to the future. 2 hours in the real world feel like 20 minutes on 9GAG.

  122. eg Avatar
    eg
    Hide

    A serious question: Is procastination linked to multipotentialism? I.e. are multipotentialites procastinators?

  123. jerik garcia Avatar
    jerik garcia
    Hide

    Nice one Tim! This is a good read. Funny yet informative. Having this perspective, I think there’s just a lil funny missing part here as well and I hope you wont mind me adding this.. the 3rd type of monkey. A type who I see realizes its own true self who is a”monk” and the “key”.. meaning this type is just playing to be a monkey not knowing he got the key to way to know what is it to be sensible human, the key to know what is this panic monster, the key to know what is being a monkey is that he chose to be.. because this type had its epiphany as well that “now is the way of living and appreciating every bit of exsitence and with the wisdom this type brings is a big smile on his face and heart and that we are all just fraction of everything makes this type to live a humbling one 🙂 #monkeylosophy

  124. Anne Darcy Avatar
    Anne Darcy
    Hide

    Love this. But the monkey should really be called the passive avoidance monkey. Instant gratification is way more selfish and this is soooo avoidance

  125. Lisa Holden Rovers Avatar
    Lisa Holden Rovers
    Hide

    Procrastination very well explained! This will be so helpful not only to myself but also the professionals that I coach to lead with purpose and influence.

  126. juju Avatar
    juju
    Hide

    Oh god…I don’t have an Instant Gratification Monkey. I AM the Instant Gratification Monkey. I’ve never thought of it this way and have always just felt incomprehensibly guilty and depressed. I’ve tried to explain it before in terms of “I hate doing things.” But I have absolutely always been procrastinator who pulls allnighters for a paper I’ve known about all semester the day before it’s due. Fortunately (or unfortunately), I’ve managed a high GPA, scholarships, etc. But wow. I’m literally procrastinating at work right at this very moment. Ouch.

  127. Orianna Avatar
    Orianna
    Hide

    There is a very cool ebook called project HTCYL that explains procrastination and helps you beat it using actual scientific studies and research. It actually helps you understand what exactly happens in your brain when you procrastinate. I learned some interesting stuff.

    1. Pax Avatar
      Pax
      Hide

      please can I get it.
      I live In Africa so am not able to receive it.
      Even of I could get the money (which I don’t) .
      it’s impossible to buy online here.

  128. Abash Ment Avatar
    Abash Ment
    Hide

    It is called ADHD! Stop reading all these articles about how to stop procrastinating and instead go find out about ADHD. There are three kinds: the hyper kind – the form men mostly have, the inattentive kind – the form women mostly have, and a combined type. If anyone ever called you a space cadet or you relate to the magic pixie dream girl that dies at the end of the movie, lady you may have lady ADHD. Go self evaluate.

    1. Bacon Games Avatar
      Bacon Games
      Hide

      Nope Brudda! I have been medically diagnosed with ADHD and ADHD makes me (and my other friends that also have ADHD) lose focus of what we are trying to do. Procrastination is NOTADHD!

  129. Donna Avatar
    Donna
    Hide

    Nightmare: “I wrote 90 pages over 72 hours, pulling not one but two all-nighters”

  130. Pasindu Ranasinghe Avatar
    Pasindu Ranasinghe
    Hide

    Totally agreed Tim. It’s kind of a joy seeing the real thing illustrated in the exact way by you. I’m totally a fan of procrastination ????

  131. Kisuke Urahara Avatar
    Kisuke Urahara
    Hide

    Okay, so i am reading this for a school assignment. But here is the short and sweet of it that I feel should be mentioned:
    So, like said in the beginning of the article the definition of procrastination is “the action of delaying or postponing something”. However, the term is currently being used in a negative turn of phrase. As mentioned in the book “Eat That Frog” by Brian Tracy procrastination is not a bad thing unplanned procrastination is the danger. One should put of the things that do not need doing and practice planed procrastination. Think about the things you need to do and the things you do not, then plan ahead in taking note of it (actually using a pen for it and keeping the note where it is seen is not a bad idea).

  132. alrey Avatar
    alrey
    Hide

    you procrastinate because you are simply not excited to do it or don’t want to do it.

  133. Bronek Avatar
    Bronek
    Hide

    Halfway through the article I noticed that I was supposed to do a bunch of things today, but hopped on the internet for a moment and regained time consciousness 5 hours later.

  134. Shawn Avatar
    Shawn
    Hide

    My son bought a book at a school book fair, “Who Would Win?” , about what would happen if a lion fought a tiger. Long story short, the tiger is bigger, stronger, and better. But the lion has a big ol’ chunk of thick hair around its neck that the tiger can’t bite through. Tiger wears out trying, and lion kills the tiger. In hindsight, might not have been the best book for a six year old.

  135. Daniel Avatar
    Daniel
    Hide

    Why the tiger would win?

  136. Cess Avatar
    Cess
    Hide

    I personally procrastinate a lot – mainly because of such blogs so rich in content and creativity. They give me the impression I am learning so much about life… Thanks but stop! Or please continue because this way of explaining everyday struggles is really hilarious. I will anyhow procrastinate so I might as well get the feeling I learned something while having fun which is super gratifying…!

  137. Mira Avatar
    Mira
    Hide

    A lot of you are probably reading this article while in the Dark Playground.
    Damn.

  138. Adam maddy Avatar
    Adam maddy
    Hide

    his article is very good and one of my favorite quotes is that nothing
    can take the place of persistence. Talent and intelligence cannot succeed
    without persistence…so I totally agree to it . thanks Marie for such a
    great article. coursework help

  139. zabolos Avatar
    zabolos
    Hide

    A fresh new take on Transactional Analysis. Or on reinventing the wheel, which is always fun.

  140. Fiona Avatar
    Fiona
    Hide

    And like another commenter here mentioned Times of India has practically rehashed your article to one of their own. They mention your name, but no links.

    http://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/O-zone/are-you-a-victim-of-your-monkey/?utm_source=Popup&utm_medium=Old&utm_campaign=TOIHP

  141. Fiona Avatar
    Fiona
    Hide

    You’re so awesome Tim Urban. The instant gratification monkey in my brain has been having a great time in office for the past 2 weeks ever since I discovered this blog. The instant gratification monkey is extremely grateful for all the illuminating posts.

  142. RolfSki Avatar
    RolfSki
    Hide

    I recommend for you to read: Taking Charge of Adult ADHD by Russell Barkley. He’s the worldwide authority on this subject. If procrastination is dominating your life, there might be more going on in your brain actually than instant gratification monkeys.

    Your production of the important neurotransmitter dopamine might be messed up (ADHD/ADD), causing all kinds of issues, instant gratification monkeys being only one of them. It can seriously screw over your life in ways you would never have thought of. Which is the reason that ADHD is often diagnosed at later ages. The good news is that this can be treated, although without medication, the monkeys will keep coming back.

    1. Fiona Avatar
      Fiona
      Hide

      Please.. not all the procrastinating individuals in the world are suffering from a mental illness. The rational humans are awesome but isn’t it a little scary to see that every non-conformist individual has to be treated for a disease? The monkeys in my head haven’t stopped me from achieving a lot more than a lot of my friends and family. Who cares if I waste entire months procrastinating if I am a happy, successful individual otherwise?

      1. RolfSki Avatar
        RolfSki
        Hide

        You obviously have no knowledge on the subject. People can only be diagnosed with ADHD if their behaviour brings them into serious trouble. And even then you can be extremely successful, ask Richard Branson.

      2. Alejandro Rojas Avatar
        Alejandro Rojas
        Hide

        He didn’t say “all” of them. He said ‘might’. Like, worth to check if.

  143. antoinettewreeves Avatar
    antoinettewreeves
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  144. Urge2DV8 Avatar
    Hide

    Somehow my eyes will not stop watering. Now on to part two.

  145. Juniper Moot Avatar
    Juniper Moot
    Hide

    “and in the most desperate moments they end up running up the tree with the monkey, entering a state of self-annihilating shutdown.”

    This is me.

  146. Charri Hart Avatar
    Charri Hart
    Hide

    Thank you for this brilliant insight and for sharing it. I have put a link to your site in my latest post on my blog http://flutterbybye.blogspot.com. I sincerely hope my readers visit your amazing blog!

  147. Lucisan Avatar
    Lucisan
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  148. supotchun Avatar
    supotchun
    Hide

    This is me procrastinating! What am I doing here!?!?!?!?!?

  149. GregoryDHull Avatar
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  150. GregoryDHull Avatar
    GregoryDHull
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  151. Peter Avatar
    Peter
    Hide

    this article is so true yet scary at the same time, cos it’s like looking into the mirror.

  152. Aimee Avatar
    Aimee
    Hide

    The instant gratification monkey rules my life!! It’s awful. 🙁 🙁 My question is, as a mom of 3 young kids, how do we teach/train children when they’re very young to prevent the instant gratification monkey from ruling their lives? I know I can greatly increase the quality of their lives if I can do this one thing.

  153. TimothyGWarren Avatar
    TimothyGWarren
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  154. peter Avatar
    peter
    Hide

    procrastination brought me here

  155. sarastro72 Avatar
    sarastro72
    Hide

    Awesome post. Describes the procrastinator very well. Not sure I agree with the normal person though. I think we all have the Instant gratification monkey and the Panic monster, just of different strengths. Some people don’t procrastinate because their Rational decision-maker is strong and the monkey weak. Some don’t procrastinate because their Panic monster is strong, keeping them in constant panic of everything that needs to be done.

  156. Will Avatar
    Will
    Hide

    Man, the pictures are abnormal of this post. please help.

  157. MaryAGriffith Avatar
    MaryAGriffith
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  158. imwithstoopid Avatar
    imwithstoopid
    Hide

    So that’s why I am who I am!
    Also procrastination has another monster, the Tormenting Regretful one. I.E., why didn’t I just do it, now it’s too late, and I’ll never get another chance again to do it, or say I’m sorry……..

  159. ThomasEPalmer Avatar
    ThomasEPalmer
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    ….All time hit the waitbutwhy Find Here

  160. 13cheska27 Avatar
    Hide

    The metaphorical explanation about the mind of a real procrastinator is so spot on. I have never seen more accurate article than this. Those humor in between were the reasons why I got to avoid wandering through the Dark Playground while reading this.

  161. LindaIGarcia Avatar
    LindaIGarcia
    Hide

    ….All time hit the waitbutwhy Find Here

  162. Unclever title Avatar
    Unclever title
    Hide

    Tragically spot on.

  163. Brian Avatar
    Brian
    Hide

    Brilliant !

  164. Ned Frame Avatar
    Ned Frame
    Hide

    ok, the article summed me up very well. Now, notice the Rational Decision Maker does NOT have a monkey! I don’t want to live with or tame the monkey, I want to KILL the fucking thing! That way I’ll be like the first guy. Do you think one is born with the goddamn monkey, or does it creep in slowly stealthily? I don’t suppose there is a magic bullet, but it sure would be nice.

  165. Sawly1971 Avatar
    Sawly1971
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  166. David Maillie Avatar
    David Maillie
    Hide

    Great take on procrastination. Did you know there is also constructive procrastination? Read more about it here: http://davidmaillie.com/how-to-stop-procrastination-and-be-more-successful/

  167. Shantyaris Avatar
    Shantyaris
    Hide

    This is so me. Thank you for the enlightement for my brain ????? I am a master of procrastination.

  168. newCodeYorik Avatar
    newCodeYorik
    Hide

    A lot has been coming together for me over the last several days, and I deduced that in many cases, mine included, procrastination is an anxiety disorder. Anxiety that a project is too big, anxiety that I don’t know where to start, anxiety that I don’t know enough, anxiety that I’ll fail etc. The Instant Gratification Monkey helps to medicate away the anxiety by bringing some pleasure to the situation, or distracting from the anxiety. The IGM is a very bad strategy adopted to avoid anxiety until the Panic Monster awakens.

    Sure, the Dark Playground is filled with anxiety, but the anxiety is a different kind of anxiety, and it’s being soothed by some serotonin from the fun monkey activities. My monkey likes to soothe anxiety by eating, so I look like the Mammoth.

    Maybe all of procrastination, ADD, and addiction are actually bad strategies for dealing with anxiety.

  169. rsso Avatar
    rsso
    Hide

    Thank you. I agree with everything. I am a procastrinator and those are symptomes I experience practically every day. Many of procastrinators have problems with masturbation and pornography which only makes the problem bigger and bigger. This could help: http://www.yourbrainrebalanced.com/index.php?topic=15558.0

  170. Cătălin Rădoi Avatar
    Cătălin Rădoi
    Hide

    HERE I AM READING THIS ARTICLE, instead of WORKING!

  171. Lisa Catto Avatar
    Lisa Catto
    Hide

    I have been looking into ADD for me. And whilst I was reading it I’m thinking I want an instant gratification monkey

    Awesome post

  172. Houshalter Avatar
    Houshalter
    Hide

    What you describe is textbook ADHD. You should really see a doctor and research the strategies other people with ADHD use to manage their life.

  173. cotpoe Avatar
    cotpoe
    Hide

    Hey Tim, you should know that Times of India used your article for a sunday supplement (3/5/15) – print edition as well as on web blog. It mentions your article title “Why procrastinators procrastinate” and used the reference quoting ” an article we read on the internet” and go on to describe the procrastination monkey we all know and love and mentions you by name as the writer. No link to this website though so I am not sure about whether proper referencing of source material was followed. Just thought you should know. Soon we’ll have the monkey,monster and mammoth in serious psychology textbooks and academia articles eh ! Cheers. The article is here :

    “Are you a victim of your monkey?”
    http://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/O-zone/are-you-a-victim-of-your-monkey/?utm_source=Popup&utm_medium=Old&utm_campaign=TOIHP

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  175. Me Avatar
    Me
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    Remember You Are Mortal

    “People should learn to organize their thought and emotion around the fundamental fact of life. The basic fundamental fact of life is that you are mortal. Your thought process and your emotion should be organized
    around your mortality. You will see if you just do this, you will naturally live joyfully, and at full potential.because every moment the thought is organized in such a way that you know that you are mortal, there is no time. There is no time to fret. There is no time to fume. There is no time to be angry. There is definitely no time to be
    depressed. There is no time, because its going.”

    1. JosephJeevanand Kommuguri Avatar

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      So listen to the voice of God and he will take you to new heights like never before — Amen

  176. Matthus Gougeus Avatar
    Matthus Gougeus
    Hide

    I should be working right now. -_-

  177. Matt Murrell Avatar

    Wow, great article! You described the act of procrastination in a way that we can all visualize and understand. Amazing!

    I believe that sometimes we can make weak excuses that fuels the Panic Monster. I just wrote an article on my website that breaks down the 18 most common procrastination excuses, and how we can beat them!

    Check it out here: http://www.alldayproductivity.com/18-procrastination-excuses-and-how-to-stop-procrastinating/

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  179. Naija Girl Abroad Avatar
    Naija Girl Abroad
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    I read this while in the dark playground. On the read blogs instead of studying playset.

  180. Ben Avatar
    Ben
    Hide

    I just thought the whole Article that I’m procrastinating RIGHT NOW. And then I laughed at the end of the Article ;D

  181. Skal Avatar
    Skal
    Hide

    This is all well and reflecting but… Isn’t procrastination fun? I mean, I want to get rid of it but it’s growing larger and I keep getting happier. Well, it’s not the monkey that’s growing, it’s the panic monster that’s dying and doesn’t scare me anymore. Right now I should be doing my homework which’s deadline was nearly a month ago and it’s very influential to my future life, yet I’m sitting here, happily reading and commenting.

    Now I’ll go read part 2.

  182. Max Avatar
    Max
    Hide

    Wait but, wouldn’t the most hardcore procrastinator procrastinate procrastination?

    1. Veloxyll Avatar
      Veloxyll
      Hide

      Yes. This IS a thing that happens. My worst effort was refusing to give the monkey his dues.

      I put my foot down and said “NOPE. NOT DOING ANYTHING FOR THE NEXT THREE DAYS EXCEPT STUDY.”
      I spent the three days sitting on the sofa. Upright. No facebook, no tv, no video games, no bookbooks. I just sat there stubbornly doing nothing.

      I am pretty sure nobody won that particular battle.

      1. Max Avatar
        Max
        Hide

        But what did you do those 3 days? Did you not study?

  183. Rodolink Avatar
    Rodolink
    Hide

    Reading this I realized I was procastinating u_u

  184. Alberto Castillo Gordon Avatar

    Nice drawings.
    So.. I’ve been procrastinating while reading this post, I should be doing my homework. And by the time I was reading, every paragraph or two I was switching tabs to check twitter, facebook and any other chat I had open.

  185. […] Recently, a colleague sent round a link to an excellent blog post by Tim Urban about Why Procrastinators Procrastinate. […]

  186. […] article, however, does an excellent job explaining the cause of procrastination. The author uses characters […]

  187. gogo Avatar
    gogo
    Hide

    It says in my horoscope for the day I was born…..”they are capable of exerting tremendous energy in order to meet a deadline and therefore are excellent additions to a work team”…So, the panic monster KO’ed.
    But the monkey is still busy with it’s tricks.
    It gives me a puzzle to work with daily.
    I say regard monkey as your necessary friend/enemy as you wish.
    What would I do without it?It is my only incentive to work or take action, actions which are often an escape from disturbing/procrastinating thoughts in the first place.
    And then I think :is the action worth it?What for should you be so efficient?For what end?Are my actions right ones?
    The only really ‘beneficial’ action is to be still and meditate,that we all know.What a difference it would make in world if we could all meditate while taking action.
    My theory is that the reason why procrastinators may refrain from taking action because they know most actions are inefficient or selfish.
    We all know this in our hearts but prefer to ‘play along’ in our jobs.I say it’s the monkey again,just a bit cleverer than before,but in essence it changes nothing.
    Only way to curb it’s activities is to become the monkey.I want to be my own monkey.
    The monkey turns my world.

  188. Patricia Ferguson Avatar
    Patricia Ferguson
    Hide

    Very seldom procrastinated about anything during my 50 years of working. However, I am now retired and because I have TIME, I have become the world’s biggest procrastinator about everything. Stay in the Dark Playground for a long time every night when I should be asleep. Get that Monkey off my back!!!!

  189. […] blog about this (https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html) , which I read, while procrastinating. Now I’m going to stop procrastinating and lay one […]

  190. Phyllis Mann Avatar
    Phyllis Mann
    Hide

    I’m late to the game, having only just found your website a few weeks ago. And now I’ve just read the Procrastination articles. If you’ve not do so already, would you consider writing an article on those who are addicted to the adrenaline of BOTH the Panic Monster and the Flow?!?!? Whipsawing between Procrastination and “I love this work so much that I never want to eat or sleep or play or do anything other than this work I am doing right now” is . . . well, I suspect you know.

    1. Jennifer Avatar
      Jennifer
      Hide

      Omg, yes. Definitely get addicted to the panic monster rush. And actually, Tim talks a lot about feeling regret over the subpar work that comes from last minute completion interfering with a sense of accomplishment for having completed the task (he dubbed this Mixed Feelings Park), but for me I tend to be overly cocky about my just before deadline work, which lends itself to me justifying my toxic procrastination with the belief/excuse that I preform better under that extreme pressure

  191. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html The article I linked to is an interesting explanation (albeit partial) about why we procrastinate, but also why we do the things we shouldn’t do while ignoring the things that need to be done. Unfortunately, it’s partial as I said, but I think I managed to figure out another part of the puzzle. […]

  192. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  193. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  194. Sȃm Evȃnēscēnt Avatar
    Sȃm Evȃnēscēnt
    Hide

    That’s totally me. I write reports of 8 pages in 45 min, which is immediately before handing them out to my professor…. I really need to work my sh** out :p
    What an enlightening article, i loved the analogy as well.

    1. Isaidamilliontimesdontexagerat Avatar
      Isaidamilliontimesdontexagerat
      Hide

      Yeah, you write at 70 words per minute for 45 minutes, non-stop and a passable report comes out the other end.

      #massiveexageration

  195. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  196. Pallavi Sharma Avatar
    Pallavi Sharma
    Hide

    I’m almost 1.5 years late getting on this train, but I have to say this: You *get* me. Thank you for writing this!

    I’ve been living with that monkey ever since I remember, and I don’t know what I would do if he were to go away and I was actually expected to (gasp!) *do* stuff.

    I’ve only read half of this post/article (whatever you like, since you prefer to call this a site and not a blog), and I may feel differently when I’m through reading all of it. Also, I thought I should register my appreciation before I get lost in the spiral clicking all those links of the right that the damn monkey is calling my attention to.

  197. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate (with a follow up on How to Beat Procrastination) (https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html; https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/11/how-to-beat-procrastination.html) How to Overcome Procrastination […]

  198. John Avatar
    John
    Hide

    Some good points here – love the monkey – but not sure (from
    the viewpoint of a chronic procrastinator) that this is the best model to
    overcome (bad word) procrastination. Anything that I see in my head as “big
    mountain to overcome” (or even “smallish mountain to overcome”) will lead to me
    procrastinating. If I go down the “I’ll set an hour aside to work on it” it’s
    too long and I’ll procrastinate. Only way I’ve found to at least get SOMEWHERE
    is to set myself this rule: “If you’re not willing to a do a task, then break
    it down to a chunk you’re willing to do, and if you’re not willing to do that
    then break it down to a smaller chuck you’re willing to do.” The chunk often
    ends up being a ridiculously small chunk, but at least I’ve made a start. Flow’s
    a good thing, but if I approach a task thinking there’s a possibility I might
    work until I experience flow then I’ll probably never start. Horrible problem,
    procrastinating. Funny how some people think, “You just get on with it” is a
    solution.

  199. Anya Avatar
    Anya
    Hide

    I hate you for that first asterisk. I was sorta telling myself this was happening, and then…

  200. Bethany Avatar
    Bethany
    Hide

    And everytime I cut it close and end up half assing everything, I tell myself all the “This is the last time! I am never waiting until the last minute again! Its time for change!” bullshit. Here I am… 2 days later… putting off homework, real work (I’m getting paid to be here), and literally every other responsiblility I have right now. I hate myself.

  201. caroleann2 Avatar
    caroleann2
    Hide

    My theory is that we procrastinators have a “strident parent” and “naughty child” scenario playing out inside our psyches and we can’t seem to break up their fight. The strident parent voice in our heads is saying: get up, go do your work, you’re lazy, you’ll fail, etc. The naughty child voice in our heads is saying: I’ll get up in a minute, I’m in the middle of something, I don’t feel like it, you can’t make me, just try and make me and I’ll show you that I’m stronger than you, etc.

    It doesn’t even mean that your real parents were nice or mean or good or bad. You’ve become your own incompetent parent and naughty child inside your head, battling it out. I haven’t figured out the answer yet, obviously, since I’m trolling the internet while I should be working. This is as far as I’ve gotten with my theory.

  202. Nish Avatar
    Nish
    Hide

    Thanks for the post and good to see the comments which make me feel I might not be the only one going through this.
    My issue is that monkey has been having his way with me for over 15 yrs now and even though I’m 33, I feel this habit is the hardest to overcome and no matter how much I read about it, there’s something that I don’t understand which always make me procrastinate.
    This is good for thought however I still don’t know how to get the Doing going.

  203. Rita Avatar
    Rita
    Hide

    take ritalin

  204. […] For more amusing and insightful reading on procrastination in general, you can’t go past this article and then this one on Wait But Why. Yes, I spent some time reading those posts instead of writing […]

  205. […] hasn’t even been able to solve. I’ll do my best and reread Wait But Why’s posts about the Immediate Gratification Monkey. Those always […]

  206. […] Tim Urban’s blog post on Why Procrastinators Procrastinate (a fantastic post by the way), he talks about the fact that the only thing that scares the […]

  207. meh Avatar
    meh
    Hide

    this is so perfect!!! bless your rational decision human for going through with this o/
    btw I’m at work rn and have a shitload of shit to do

  208. PrincessAlly Avatar
    PrincessAlly
    Hide

    I’ve been in the dark playground 2 weeks. Today is Friday…my paper is due Monday

  209. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  210. […] is to understand what happens when we procrastinate. My favourite explanation is by Tim Urban of Wait But Why (which is a fantastic blog that I recommend). If you don’t have time to read both parts of his […]

  211. […] is to understand what happens when we procrastinate. My favourite explanation is by Tim Urban of Wait But Why (which is a fantastic blog that I recommend). If you don’t have time to read both parts of his […]

  212. Toriko Emoglobin Avatar
    Toriko Emoglobin
    Hide

    It was a horrible decision to cite the cause of his distractions on a post meant for those who are easily distracted.

  213. Aziza Avatar
    Aziza
    Hide

    Someone asked a successful man how to motivate yourself to do smth the other told: “There’s no way. Stay in the ass”
    (c) Artem Lebedev

  214. […] Wait, But Why (This post is about procrastination – but they are so connected for me) […]

  215. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  216. […] of procrastinating when I’m tired (which lately has been almost always!) My niece posted this article about procrastinators on Facebook recently, which really resonated with me (Spoiler: the “instant gratification […]

  217. […] from the stress of striving for perfection (best post ever about procrastination at waitbutwhy.test), and it all leads to a chaos that looks calm and put-together and […]

  218. […] think I can do everything on the list for today. Partly because I procrastinate. Speaking of which, this article is spot-on. That right there is my […]

  219. […] First, I start this post with the recognition that the best, most useful thing about procrastination has already been written. […]

  220. […] rabbit holes of distraction and instant gratification. (See this great post on waitbutwhy.test about procrastination. Later. After you finish this short but pithy […]

  221. […] a slave to the monkey! Anyway, to get an idea of what I’m talking about check out the website. If you don’t identify at all – firstly, congratulations and secondly, are you sure […]

  222. […] problem is I suck as being proactive and self-motivating (I don’t have an instant gratification monkey, I have an instant gratification gorilla), and I need a schedule/structure to function best. Being […]

  223. desi Avatar
    desi
    Hide

    Omg this is so me i need to get up and go pick up my house but instead I’ll read this long article, then write this post, then Re read it and then edit it and then go through 100 other posts and then think of more stuff I could write to make this post even longer then it already has become i don’t want to stop writing cuz then ima have to go clean…. OH NO! PANIC MONSTER!!!!!! Haha jk don’t have to panic yet…. Not till 10min before I have to go get my daughter from daycare, i could continue to write but i really should take a nap 🙂

  224. […] aforementioned analogy comes from the article “Why Procrastinators Procrastinate” and “How to Beat Procrastination” is the follow up article. They’re incredibly […]

  225. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate […]

  226. […] here we are. The first of 365 consecutive posts. I’m leaving this link for myself as a reminder, and for any of you who also need an extra nudge in the ‘just get […]

  227. […] else, so what you need to do is continue to imagine that pull towards procrastination as the cute Instant Gratification Monkey from the fantastic blog Wait But Why and domesticate him. Get him to pull you towards great and productive ways to procrastinate rather […]

  228. calimon Avatar
    Hide

    Procrastination Monkey is telling me I can read “Part 2, How To Beat Procrastination” later.

  229. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  230. […] reading this great article by Tim Urban on Wait But Why (check it out here) on the subject of procrastination I decided to add a few of my views about getting things […]

  231. […] Check out the articles here: https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  232. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate […]

  233. […] w temacie – dwa zajmujące artykuły o istocie prokrastynacji i sposobach na walkę z nią: Kim jest Małpka Natychmiastowej Gratyfikacji… …i jak sobie z nią […]

  234. Kashyep Avatar
    Kashyep
    Hide

    ” The tiger wins!” Thank you!
    Anyway nicely done!

  235. Hide

    […] It’s a mess. And with the monkey in charge, the procrastinator finds himself spending a lot of time in a place called the Dark Playground.” Tim Urban: Why procrastinators procrastinate […]

  236. kayleeturner05 Avatar
    kayleeturner05
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    I liked your blog, and I agree with what you were saying. I can relate to this blog because I procrastinate all the time.

  237. Rockbottom .radioshow Avatar
    Rockbottom .radioshow
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    I’m sooo glad its all the monkeys fault and not mine… WHEW…!!!

  238. Draganove Avatar
    Draganove
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    a) finally somebody who understand what the deal is
    b) yeah i did read it in my dark plyground

  239. susie Avatar
    susie
    Hide

    what I really wonder is where the monkey comes from in the first place and why some people don’t seem to have it. is it just a negative spiral (i.e. everybody has it, but some don’t let it grow power), or is there something else behind it? Some people here mentioned perfectionism, others mentioned doubt to be in the right “dark woods” at all (should I get a different job?)…
    Just like you I learned over the years with every last-minute submission of a paper/report etc. that I can do things in a very short time (not in good quality, and with mixed feelings, of course…). But I can do it. I seem to be so extraordinarily clever or talented or effective to be able to do things in 2 hours that take others weeks and months… am I just bored or underchallenged in my job? why am I not motivated to do better work, brilliant work that I can be 100% proud of? maybe because I don’t get the right kind of gratification in/from my work?

    1. Karan Avatar
      Karan
      Hide

      EXACTLY what she said.

      We’ve long-established that it ain’t ability that makes the most difference but grit/staying-at-it-ability/perseverance (let’s call it X-ness).
      Why do different people (from the same school and similar home environments) have different X-ness levels? Why are some people’s monkeys stronger while others can discipline em easily?

    2. Strizh Avatar
      Strizh
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      Excellent post! The same applies to me “I can do work in 2 hours that takes others weeks and months”. Unfortunately in my case I don’t think that I am under challenged in my job or just bored. Without the “panic monster” I am unable to fulfill any goals. The issue is that everything job related isn’t a big thing for me because the “panic monster” is pretty strong but when it comes to everything else he is just a lazy bastard. And that’s my major problem, which makes me unable to enjoy my life and to reach my dreams and goals.

    3. caroleann2 Avatar
      caroleann2
      Hide

      I think it has to do with the queues you got from your parents while growing up. I think the monkey represents your child-self (also known as your “id” in Freudian terms). So when you were 8 years old, for example, you started to test boundaries (like all 8 year olds), and you didn’t want to get up and brush your teeth at night because you were watching “I Dream of Jeannie,” or you didn’t want to take a bath because you were watching “Bewitched” or you didn’t want to get out of bed in the morning for school because you stayed up too late the night before watching Jeannie and Bewitched, and you didn’t want to do your homework when you first got home from school like a good girl or boy because you wanted to play with your friends instead. Believe me, TV was just as huge a distraction back in the old days as computers are today, despite only having 3 channels.

      If your parents didn’t correct your behavior and effectively steer your ship to the healthy way of accomplishing tasks, then the 8-year old was steering the ship instead (and still does). I’m not putting down or blaming my parents but I was the 4th child and I think they pretty much ran out of parenting steam by the time I came along. I was the captain of my own ship at a pretty early age. I did a decent job for a kid but that kid is, unfortunately, inside my head causing the adult-me a lot of trouble.

  240. M Avatar
    M
    Hide

    so true, I’m in the dark playground right now… should I continue to part 2 or get back to work

  241. […] Wait. It seems like I’m describing procrastination. I was. While we’re at it, check out this intensely hilarious post on Why Procrastinators Procrastinate […]

  242. San Avatar
    San
    Hide

    Thank god for panic monster, but I worry my monkey is beginning to get used to him now

  243. […] a monkey living in my brain who likes instant gratification. Tim Urban wrote a post regarding procrastination on his Wait But Why blog and when I came across it (as well as the follow-up post on how to beat […]

  244. […] brief introductory comment about a great article on procrastination – by Tim […]

  245. spbone Avatar
    spbone
    Hide

    Is this gratification monkey something scientifically proven? I’ve heard that everybody procrastinates.

  246. […] procrastination. I recently read a two-part article about procrastinating that I liked a lot: The first part is about why procrastinators procrastinate and the second part is about how we can beat […]

  247. MarmiteMymite Avatar
    MarmiteMymite
    Hide

    I totally recognized myself in your description. You are definitely right: “something has to change”!
    I have added you to my “procrastination is not a fatality” list of must read links.
    https://skim.it/u/Theluckyguy/procrastination-is-not-a-fatality

  248. […] 1) 2-part article on how to kill procrastination: https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  249. […] stumbled upon this video of the educator John Taylor Gatto yesterday as I was hanging around in the “dark playground” and avoiding writing 1 of 2 remaining papers for the class I’m taking this semester. […]

  250. […] article about procrastination was just right up my alley. I never really realised how much i did it and that there was a better […]

  251. Jessica Avatar
    Jessica
    Hide

    Hahaha this is hilarious and so true. I should be working right now…

  252. R Avatar
    R
    Hide

    Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! I have been a procrastinator since I was a kid, and for long while the panic monster managed to let me scrape by. That doesn’t help anymore though.
    “And these are the lucky procrastinators—there are some who don’t even respond to the Panic Monster, and in the most desperate moments they end up running up the tree with the monkey, entering a state of self-annihilating shutdown.”

    Yea, I’m there now. I’m writing this comment while skipping a class for a paper that was due, that I have not written a single word for. And this isn’t the first time. I turned in my last paper three days late. Of the 6 midterms I’ve had this semester, I’ve only manage to study for 1. And I have totally turned in papers a month late, by pleading with my teachers. I passed the point of no return a long time ago, and am now in a state of perpetual guilt. I’ve been told a thousand reasons about why I supposedly procrastinate, and why I shoulld just Do it. But this is the first time, anyone’s ever got it.

  253. […] are, when you get to your goal weight, that instant gratification is enough to keep you happy for the time being, and in due time, it’ll go away and […]

  254. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate. (via @WaitButWhy) Our staff read through this together earlier this week, and all I know is that Tim Urban is in my brain. Make sure you also read part two. (Warning: a couple of Bad Words exist in this post. Please don’t judge me.) […]

  255. Excelanto Avatar
    Excelanto
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    Thanks for your valuable posting.I have collect more than information from your website. It is really wonderful blog. please added more than tips. i’m working in top cms In Chennai .Here providing very low price CMS , responsive webdesign and ERP. you have any more than information kindly make me call this number 044-42127512 or send your mail info@excelanto.com.

  256. […] game of Borraco! According to a wonderful and insightful blog post about procrastination by Wait But Why, I am wallowing in the ‘dark playground’ because my internal ‘let’s just […]

  257. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  258. Arch Avatar
    Arch
    Hide

    “I’m reading so much interesting stuff right now… wait what was that… what the AAAHHHHHHhhholycrapdeadline!”

  259. […] my fab friend Richard shared this brilliant post by Tim Urban with me on Facebook. It was so good I went on to read the follow up without even […]

  260. […] me, wish there was some kind of AA for procrastinators, stop reading this now and head AT ONCE to this amazing post about procrastination on Wait But Why. And, in exchange, I’ll stop blogging, aka […]

  261. […] Now in college I have realised what “smartness” has done for me.  Made me morbidly unprepared.  Those who couldn’t grasps concepts as easily as I have developed habits, rigid routines, to ensure that they pass and understand the material.  While I have developed an apathy for strenuous mental tasks, and a home in the dark playground. […]

  262. […] exercise), but no matter what causes it it’s kinda crippling. I’ll leave you with a great article about procrastinators. That Dark Playground metaphor sure hits […]

  263. Jayce Avatar
    Jayce
    Hide

    noooo procrastinators prrocrastinate becasue doing shit suckkkkkkkks

  264. Daniels Scott Avatar
    Daniels Scott
    Hide

    Finally, someone clearly defines what procrastination is. This is so accurate, it somewhat scares me. All the signs of a true procrastinator is there; the very reason why I’m here is because I’ve been putting off my report while googling “how to fight procrastination”. I’m still a junior at the American School of Entrepreneurship and I don’t think procrastinating is a healthy habit if I’m about to enter the “real world” in a few years. Is there a cure for this? Do I need to see a psychiatrist?

  265. […] Part 1: https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  266. […] film in the 2005 edition of 1001 Movies to See Before You Die. I only got 14 movies in before the Instant Gratification Monkey took hold and I was back to spending my free time watching shit like this for hours on end. My […]

  267. bespectacledreader - goodreads.com Avatar
    bespectacledreader – goodreads.com
    Hide

    “How else could you explain the same person who can’t write a paper’s introductory sentence over a two-week span suddenly having the ability to stay up all night, fighting exhaustion, and write eight pages?” —> that is exactly the point ~ we procrastinate because we have this ‘power’ that usually comes forth when the deadline nears which leads to my conclusion that Procrastinators are Superheroes in a twisted wort of way I believe the only way to stop procrastination is by facing a villian —> that could be in a form of FAILURE? Well change should come from within D: Ugh, dunno if I am making sense but yeah, procrastination is bad but procrastinators when they procrastinate should not REGRET anything. Because during their time in the dark playground, I believe they enjoyed it a little even if their is guilt lurking. Thank you for this article.

  268. […] myself for no good reason- “just for doing life” (see also waitbutwhy.test’s Dark Playground; I’ve spent most of my life in the Dark Playground and in Mixed Feelings Park when I ought to […]

  269. Procrastination Killer Avatar
    Procrastination Killer
    Hide

    I like your article, but the genius methods to solve my problems with procrastination. So I am now an fantastic For more information about the methods I use to beat procrastination I have made an website about procrastination killers. I am so excited!>>>: http://goo.gl/N8ig61

  270. […] research paper I have due in three days.  This is something that is a constant struggle for me and this article does a really nice job of explaining […]

  271. Ricardo Avatar
    Ricardo
    Hide

    I had this open in my browser for over a month, just read it (partially). I can finally close this tab!

  272. this is a load of monkey sh*t Avatar
    this is a load of monkey sh*t
    Hide

    Petty sure the “instant gratification monkey” is just a lack of self-discipline and consistency. I used to be like this but then I finally decided to face reality and just come to accept that it is all just a matter of lack of self-discipline. Lack of self-discipline is simply what people call”ADHD”. ADHD is nothing but a fairy tale.

    1. I'mNoExpertBut... Avatar
      I’mNoExpertBut…
      Hide

      then you were just a person who was inconsistent and lacked discipline, not a person with real ADD.
      Yea for you, for facing YOUR reality, but you aren’t quite finished…you’ve still got that being a butthole thing to work through. You missed the part where the author differentiates between those who can and those who really can’t help it. Look, over there! A kid with thick glasses and a wheelchair — he just isn’t TRYING HARD ENOUGH, right? Spina bifida is nothing but a fairy tale and legal blindness is a joke, right?

      1. Gary O. Avatar
        Gary O.
        Hide

        Very interesting comment. I hope he has the I.Q., or the moral honesty, to think it through!

  273. […] is Part 2. You won’t get Part 2 if you haven’t read Part 1 yet. For Part 1, click here. […]

  274. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    Best post I’ve read on the subject. I’ve been looking for someone to describe what I’ve been experiencing for many years now. THANK YOU!

  275. […] forward and YET, sliding backwards feels like the easiest and safest thing to do. It’s a form of procrastination, but there’s a special section of hell reserved for those of us whose project is our own health. […]

  276. Kemmer Avatar
    Kemmer
    Hide

    My instant gratification monkey is so used to the panic monster coming around that he is no longer scared of it. It’s to the point now that the panic monster doesn’t even bother anymore.

  277. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    I was reading this article to procrastinate from doing a project. Stupid monkey!

  278. Lena Avatar
    Lena
    Hide

    I FREAKING LOVE your Website!!!!!!!!! My monkey did a good thing for once by taking me here.

  279. […] of my life, when I stumbled across this blog article thingy: Why Procrastinators Procrastinate Part One and Part […]

  280. […] turning 30, I’ve also decided to make some major changes in the way I live my life. I read this amazing post on procrastination the other day, ironically, while procrastinating, and it really got me thinking about my […]

  281. […] tool but…effective?  By the way,  if you haven’t read Wait But Why’s absolutely brilliant post on procrastination, do so now.  Or, you […]

  282.  Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    I finally got my IGM shirt!! 😀

  283. Keshia Avatar
    Keshia
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    How cite in APA format

  284. […] mind works. Earlier this year, I stumbled across a fantastic article by Tim Urban called, Why Procrastinators Procrastinate. If you want a diagram of Justin Register’s brain and how it works, just click on the […]

  285. […] the Instant Gratification Monkey causing you to […]

  286. […] Part One: https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  287. […] Something that I wish we would have done differently is every college kid’s problem: procrastination. […]

  288. […] do procrastinators procrastinate? This excellent article on Wait but Why explains the mechanism in which our reptilian brain (or Monkey) takes control over our actions, […]

  289. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate […]

  290. Bubba Avatar
    Bubba
    Hide

    I’ll read this later.

  291. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  292. […] All you need to know about procrastination […]

  293. […] Wait But Why – Part IWait But Why – Part IIStructured ProcrastinationEducation Portal […]

  294. […] Wait But Why – Part IWait But Why – Part IIStructured ProcrastinationEducation Portal […]

  295. […] Wait But Why – Part I Wait But Why – Part II Structured Procrastination Education Portal […]

  296. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  297. Jen Avatar
    Jen
    Hide

    I LOVE YOUR SITE. Very insightful articles.

  298. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate […]

  299. […] So then I write a lot, right? Wrong. My desire to write is stopping me from appropriately investing myself in my proper job, while the all-consuming guilt of not working as ambitiously as I should is preventing me from actually writing anything. Oh ugly little procrastination! But the Internet would not be the Internet if it didn’t provide me with pitiful tales of my co-sufferers and their often equally pitiful attempts at beating the Monkey (Which monkey? – this one). […]

  300. […] waitbutwhy.test – Why Procrastinators Procrastinate 1/2 […]

  301. […] won’t help that this became a useful blog […]

  302. Connor Avatar
    Connor
    Hide

    Good info. Lucky me I came across your blog by chance (stumbleupon). I’ve book marked it for later!

  303. […] taking on Python (a computer programming language), I caught myself procrastinating by reading this article about procrastination.  I got there because I was on Facebook, and a friend of […]

  304. terrified Avatar
    terrified
    Hide

    what can be more obvious sign of procrastination than having this article open in one of brower’s tab and not reading it for about two months? The truth is painful and fearful and these are real reasons to procrastinate…

  305. […] course, if a diamond is enjoyable but by enjoying it you’re screwing your future diamonds (an Instant Gratification Monkey specialty), that’s not so good. Likewise, if you’re using diamond after diamond to […]

  306. […] course, if a diamond is enjoyable but by enjoying it you're screwing your future diamonds (an Instant Gratification Monkey specialty), that's not so good. Likewise, if you're using diamond after diamond to build something […]

  307. […] course, if a diamond is enjoyable but by enjoying it you’re screwing your future diamonds (an Instant Gratification Monkey specialty), that’s not so good. Likewise, if you’re using diamond after diamond to […]

  308. Felipa Avatar
    Felipa
    Hide

    Thanks for some other informative website. Where else could I get that kind of information written in such a perfect way? I’ve a challenge that I am just now operating on, and I’ve been on the look out for such information.

  309. […] my novel, my goals are time focused. For example, I’ll decided to write until 4pm; when my lazy, instant-gratification-monkey brain wants to knock off by 3, I have to make myself keep going until quittin’ time, even if I […]

  310. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  311. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
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    BORING

  312. […] I hope you may find it of value as well!  Check it out:  https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  313. Anon Avatar
    Anon
    Hide

    Checking to see if this site allows anonymous comments. I don’t bother with sites that don’t.

  314. Alexander Avatar
    Alexander
    Hide

    The problem with this article is though, that the procrastinator you’re describing is not really a procrastinator… Let me explain.

    Most people I know, works in the way that you described, they want to do fun stuff all the time and rather watch Youtube, play video games and watch Facebook rather than studying. And then when a test comes up and when it’s panic, they do everything at the same time, often the night before. But this is a description of the common person tbh.

    A true procrastinator in my option, is a person like me who have problems motivating myself to even do stuff that I find interesting and funny. For example, I have to motivate myself to do my hobbies like playing video games and watch series and stuff like that, which other people at least do without even have to think about it. That’s what I call true procrastinating. Even when I am unemployed and can use all my days for whatever I want and have a TODO list on all fun stuff I want to do, the result is more like I walk around the apartment doing nothing and then do something useless at the computer and maybe read forums.

    The people I know who I consider the opposite of a procrastinator is the description you use of a procrastinator. At least they spend their time with their interests and effectively use their time for fun stuff they have as interests. They are very intense at doing stuff which they consider funny to do. Which in my option is not a procrastinator, because they actually do a lot of stuff. These people are the true instant-gratification people, because they can without thinking about it start up a video game and play all day. While people like me can wait days before I even start one.

    Anyone agree?

    1. Brendan Greig Avatar
      Brendan Greig
      Hide

      You just described clinical depression…….

    2. PJmir Avatar
      PJmir
      Hide

      Yup, clinical depression dude. Going through it myself. I am jobless, living off of reserve income. I know what I have to do. I know how to do it. I want to do it but the god damn monkey keeps me in the dark playground. I make set unrealistically huge goals and fail on a daily basis so now the depression has kicked into something like this:

      *Wake up at 5, go back to sleep by 5:30 since I can’t motivate myself to do anything.

      *Wake up 9am again

      *Take my dog out for a walk.

      *Come back and walk around my apartment. Do absolutely nothing. Lay down on couch. Surf the internet. Read articles about self improvement.
      *Maybe go to the gym
      *Now it’s 6pm – I am just thinking about having my first meal.

      *Surf some more, read forms, day dream about how I will start my business tomorrow when i wake up at 5am and start my day right!

      *Eat 8-10pm

      *Take my dog out for a bike ride (most days). 10pm
      *Browse the internet and sleep

      I should try the dark woods regardless of what time I wake up

      1. Mariusz Avatar
        Mariusz
        Hide

        Man, reach out to your friends, talk about it. The more you do it honestly and openly, the more it will dissolve and people will try and help you. It must be face to face as well.

        And one tip about waking up. Start 30 minutes before your normal wake up time. Don’t run a marathon if the only running you do is to the bus stop. Also watch this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lp7E973zozc

        1. papalagui Avatar
          papalagui
          Hide

          Awesome video, thanks!!

  315. […] I know they aren’t phenominal goals, but the instant gratification monkey is strong with this one.  (Great article here: https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html) […]

  316. […] myself for no good reason- “just for doing life” (see also waitbutwhy.test’s Dark Playground; I’ve spent most of my life in the Dark Playground and in Mixed Feelings Park when I ought to […]

  317. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate and How to Beat Procrastination by Tim Urban […]

  318. […] another article made me realize that I am just a little bit procrastinated. […]

  319. […] Procrastination […]

  320.  Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    yeah the three of us were like that until we took acid. now me and my monkey just sit around laughing at literally everything because nothing really matters in life or trying to cheer up the panic monster from his bad trip

  321. Ike Lee Avatar
    Ike Lee
    Hide

    I wanted to print it out, so that I can read it without any distraction. But the print-layout of your site is totally messed up!

  322. […] the many online resources that I have scoured for solutions to the ailment that is procrastination, this is the best one I’ve found. As any procrastinator will tell you it’s not our fault; […]

  323. […] – aka: if you don’t have a clue what I’m talking about – check out this article on procrastination. It saved my life. As in, um, my […]

  324. […] Generation Y Yuppies Are Unhappy 7 Ways to be Insufferable on Facebook Why Procrastinators Procrastinate How to Name a Baby How to Pick Your Life Partner Your Life in Weeks 10 Types of 30-Year-Old Single […]

  325. […] it, but honestly, there’s no quick fix. (Also, this borders on procrastination, so have a look at this hilariously accurate post about why procrastinators procrastinate. I spent a good deal of time in the Dark Playground while attempting to write this column, by the […]

  326. […] I mean online blog posts. There are endless articles on techniques, strategies, and the reasons behind why we […]

  327. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate | Wait But Why […]

  328. Smithc47 Avatar
    Smithc47
    Hide

    Link exchange is nothing else but it is simply placing the other persons web site link on your page at proper place and other person will also do same for you. ekdbdaefcebafgcf

  329. Jatumanae Avatar
    Jatumanae
    Hide

    I feel like my feelings are exagerating but I want to cry…for feeling so identified and somehow slightly relived that I’m not alone -just because I

  330. […] I was lost in the dark playground: […]

  331. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate […]

  332. Lunatic lonely guy Avatar
    Lunatic lonely guy
    Hide

    Man I don't even know what to say this is perfect and brilliant! Monkey, panic monster, dark playground are all describes my life. That's crazy. I thought I was the only one suffering from this damn thing. I hope we all(real procrastinators) kick this monster's ass and reach our real potential. 

  333. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  334. anon Avatar
    anon
    Hide

    oh no where is my panic monster. Im in my Dark playground. Panic monster I need you

  335. […] for finals on the sea of self-loathing procrastination. This particular evening I was indulging my instant gratification monkey with some undeserved time in the dark playground that is Reddit. I did not expect this little […]

  336. […] “necessary” bullshit “should” come first – and then quite probably, depending on our personality type, procrastinated such that neither the truly important thing nor the bullshit got done – you’re in the danger […]

  337. Imogene Avatar
    Imogene
    Hide

    Good post. I’m dealing with some of these issues as well..

  338. […] links of interest:Why Procrastinators Procrastinate, How to Beat Procrastination both via MeFi.Irony(?) alert: I haven’t actually gotten around […]

  339. […] all procrastinate blah blah blah, but this read looks at the deeper meanings behind why some of us have consistent issues battling the problem. […]

  340. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate, a wonderful blog post that is very popular among the reddit procrastination crowd. It is valuable because it gives names to the thoughts and feelings we procrastinators have. By giving these things names, it’s easier to think about them objectively. This is a must-read. So is the follow-up post, How to Beat Procrastination. […]

  341. […] and probably always will be. I have to recommend this though, it's hilarious and spot on: Why Procrastinators Procrastinate | Wait But Why dont miss the follow up about hot to beat t: How to Beat Procrastination | Wait But Why […]

  342. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  343. […] admit it: Most of this week’s Writing Monday has been conducted in the Dark Playground. I didn’t mean for it to happen (honest Guvnor) – indeed for the past hour I’ve […]

  344. Rosalind Avatar
    Rosalind
    Hide

    I have a procrastination problem but would say I have more of a ‘Lemming of Lethargy’ than a ‘Instant Gratification Monkey’

  345. […] : cet article est une traduction de  Why Procrastinators Procrastinate du blog waitbutwhy.test C’est donc lui qui s’exprime dans le “je” de cet article ! […]

  346. […] thought really hard about how to bring across this point, then I came across this aricle: https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html. To summarize, it says that procrastinators succumb easily to instant gratification, and thus often […]

  347. Julie Singleton Avatar
    Julie Singleton
    Hide

    Fantastic post which really unpicks what’s going on when anything in the world seems more appealing than sitting down and writing my novel. The terms Instant Gratification Monkey and The Dark Woods will stick hereafter in my mind! I even have Instant Gratifcation Monkey as my screensaver as a reminder. Great stuff!

  348. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate (Wait But Why) […]

  349. […] useful metaphor about procrastination and attention that is helping me change my relationship to work. One of the monkey’s most useful insights: […]

  350. Tomastinator Avatar
    Tomastinator
    Hide

    I beat procrastination with the pomodoro technique. I just told the monkey, yes we’ll read about which medieval kings were related to each other then argue with people on wikipedia, AFTER we do 25 mins of work. Once i got on the work it felt good so I continued it. For me, tomatoes are a bit like procrastination anyway so it came easy. Maybe I am not a true procrastinator? NO, but I am, because if I don’t do tomatoes I actually have no other incentive to work, the phd doesn’t matter, it’s all about the tomatoes. see http://www.mytomatoes.com if interested.

  351. […] And check that article on procrastination here Wait But Why […]

  352. […] a massive upgrade to my profile. Truly, this activity was nothing more than a manifestation of the Instant Gratification Monkey, but it sure did make me feel productive. I am tickled pink with the […]

  353. […] Dark Playground is a place every procrastinator knows well,” he writes in his post, Why Procrastinators Procrastinate. “It’s a place where leisure activities happen at times when leisure activities are not […]

  354. […] I would imagine that this article on how to beat procrastination might be useful for us all (I can’t tell you how many times I opened Facebook in the course of […]

  355. […] interesting follow-up to the lesson on multitasking: a lengthy, heavily metaphorical explanation of the phenomenon of procrastination and how to overcome […]

  356. Anonymous2 Avatar
    Anonymous2
    Hide

    This article makes “Spanking the Monkey” now ambiguous.

  357. […] post, getting up every fifteen minutes to smoke another cigarette, and just generally living in the Dark Playground.*  I’m basically on a bender right now without any intoxicants whatsoever.  Why?  Who the […]

  358. Shawn Avatar
    Shawn
    Hide

    It’s too funny how long the comment list is on an article about procrastination. I wish I could say I was writing this comment from somewhere other than the Dark Playground, but what are you gonna do.

    I read this at least once a week, and I just wanted to say that I think it’s one of the most insightful, brilliant pieces of writing on the Internet. It’s helped me tremendously to use your visualizations to break through procrastination. Do I always wrangle the monkey? No, but I’m winning more than I used to.

    It’s funny, but I don’t even know what the rest of your blog is about. I’ll get around to checking your other posts, but it will have to be from the Happy Playground.

  359. […] The instant gratification monkey; https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  360. Floater Avatar
    Floater
    Hide

    I look up music and articles about procrastination when I’m procrastinating. I have just come down from that tree, took control of the steering wheel one week ago, and I’m debating whether or not to give up and let go again, right now. I am not a lucky procrastinator. I don’t even consider myself a procrastinator anymore. I have “graduated” with a BA in Procrastination. I am a Never Do-er. My panic monster and monkey are best friends. They play together, without me.

  361. […] fit well), here is a non-scientific, but still interesting and very amusingly accurate picture of why people procrastinate.  And also an equally hilarious and illustrated follow-up to the article, including a few words […]

  362. […] pretty awesome websites to visit: how to change your (bad) habits by changing your environment, why people procrastinate (eerily accurate), and how to beat procrastination, now that you know what you know about why you […]

  363. […] The instant gratification monkey; https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  364. […] Part I – Why Procrastinators Procrastinate […]

  365. […] just a dumb human. One of my favorite blogger says that a relative of this monkey is the one behind procrastination as well, but that’s another […]

  366. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  367. […] You procrastinators out there have to read this. It explains why we are what we are!  https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  368. […] The Great Perils of Social Interaction […]

  369. […] constitutes procrastination (synonymous to “hesitating”) in two highly recommendable pieces (part 1, part 2). In a nutshell, the rational decision-maker is distracted by the instant gratification […]

  370. Secret_treaties Avatar
    Secret_treaties
    Hide

    That Panic Monster made me laugh so hard, most likely because I was looking at him today… Aaaaaaahhhhhhh
    That section pretty much described my day

  371. […] procrastinate…and admitted that I myself am a secret procrastinator. Here’s a link to the article if you’d like to read it (it’s a bit long but the images the writer made […]

  372. jessisca Avatar
    jessisca
    Hide

    hi

  373. Lodewijk Avatar
    Lodewijk
    Hide

    I’ll read this later.

  374. […] ran into this post that Tim Urban wrote on the subject some time back. I recommend you to give it a read if you […]

  375. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  376. […] NO MORE PROCRASTINATING ESTELLE!! i detest the dark playground… […]

  377. curious Avatar
    curious
    Hide

    So the real question…Why would the tiger win?

  378. Joan Avatar
    Joan
    Hide

    This is so nice. And so true. Not that I didn’t know it. But coming from someone else, it sounds so much better and more logical. And more real. Great job. Thank you!

  379. […] “Why Procrastinators Procrastinate” from Wait But Why; October 2013 […]

  380. […] right, so last week we dove into the everyday inner struggle of the procrastinatorto examine the underlying psychology going on. But this week, when we’re actually trying to do […]

  381. […] lead to never actually having any time to relax, due to all the I-really-should-be-working-guilt. WaitButWhy refers to this as the dark playground and has a really good overview of the […]

  382. […] all of the Smells Like Teen Spirit Angst worth it. Recently I found an amazing two part essay on why procrastinators procrastinate and how to stop procrastinating (bonus incentive: I think the author writes like me… or I write […]

  383. Julius Avatar
    Julius
    Hide

    I love reading all your comments and the blog post, of course. Here is another page that should speak from your heart. http://procrastinators-united.tumblr.com It’s kind of paradoxical how we are so aware of who we are but still don’t manage to change our bad behaviors… 🙂

  384. […] hier het hele […]

  385. […] More posts from Wait But Why:Why Generation Y Yuppies Are Unhappy7 Ways to be Insufferable on FacebookWhy Procrastinators Procrastinate […]

  386. Jiri Avatar
    Jiri
    Hide

    my girlfriend was so excited about this article and the fact that she is not alone, that she started crying and wanted to send a thankful email to the author of this text. However, as she is a true procrastinator, she will probably never manage to write it, so I do it: Thank you!

    1. Skelped Erse Avatar
      Skelped Erse
      Hide

      i actually laughed out loud. she’s a sis

  387.  Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    y god you are so right about things here! I am supposed to be studying but here I am in the dark playground. Good article!

  388. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  389. Dyanne Brown Avatar
    Dyanne Brown
    Hide

    This is a totally awesome and completely accurate depiction. I would write more, but I’m procrastinating. LOL

  390. […] this post by Tim Urban (maybe with help from Andrew Finn?) was entertaining and seemed to have more than a kernel of truth […]

  391. […] links to really good article about procrastination. Well and funny written! Part 1 and Part […]

  392. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate. This is fantastic. I’ve read a few books and articles on this subject but never have I seen such an excellent summary of procrastination. It also links to a follow-up article that addresses combatting procrastination, which is also excellent. […]

  393. […] you’ve ever wondered how procrastination works, it apparently involves a monkey.  I myself spend many hours every day in the Dark Playground.  But I think I might have stumbled […]

  394. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate […]

  395. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate […]

  396. Amy Avatar
    Amy
    Hide

    This sums up my academic career. Thank you for making it past the dark playground and posting this. I am determined to try these tips out now.

  397. […] popularity trends over time. The Voyager is delicious and rents permanent space in my Dark Playground. (Of course, as soon as it was the topic of this post, putting Voyager play time in the […]

  398. Brianna Avatar
    Brianna
    Hide

    While reading this I ended up moving to the Primate Awards and reading all of that, and then reading the Bunny Manifesto and reading all of that. Finally I came back here only to be distracted by a browser game I’m playing. Soon I finished this post. This is my life. 😐

  399. […] Who would have thought that after decades of struggle with procrastination, the dictionary, of all places, would hold the solution. Avoid procrastination. So elegant in its simplicity. While we’re here, let’s make sure obese people avoid overeating, depressed people avoid apathy, and someone please tell beached whales that they should avoid being out of the ocean. (more) […]

  400. […] you cannot understand why someone would do this to themselves then I found this rather interesting blog post that hits the nail on the head regarding procrastination. His concept of the Dark Playground is […]

  401. […] you do them and why you don’t do some things that you should do, please read this article. First part of the article explains why we procrastinate, and the second part tells us how to beat […]

  402. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  403.  Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    I think this article is very interesting. However, it depicts procrastination as inherently bad… like a distraction form more important things. I believe procrastination can be very good too. It can help you focus on yourself and letting yourself and thoughts go in times when everything is about MUSTs and HAVE TOs. I found this interesting pro-procrastination list here: http://procrastinators-united.tumblr.com/post/75573164345/pro-procrastination-3-procrastination-saves-time#notes

  404. ella Avatar
    ella
    Hide

    Why do you know my life?! In the dark playground now, meant to start my homeowrk 8 hours ago, oops.

  405. […] I’ve learned a couple of things about myself in doing those this past week: 1) they feed my instant gratification monkey, and 2) they take a lot more time on WordPress than is reasonable for a human being who does […]

  406. […] info about procrastination, including the instant gratification monkey, at https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html and how to beat it […]

  407.  Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    I just love this post! So accurate. Thankyou!

  408. […] (Complete with accessories of a cape, a steering wheel and a banana!) from an old friend who read this article and wanted her own little […]

  409. […] stopping midway after writing a few pages- but not exactly.  My problem can be defined as a mix of procrastination plus losing steam owing to laziness. A complicated, yet real world problem This post itself has […]

  410. […] 2.  Why Procrastinators Procrastinate […]

  411. […] blog set up since December 2012. Never got around to the writing part though. I’m probably a hopeless procrastinator. But I’m okay with […]

  412. […] While you can write faster or better by using a few tricks, ultimately the only way to write a book is to keep typing until you get to the end. If you’re a procrastinator like me, I recommend reading Tim Urban’s “Why Procrastinators Procrastinate” over at Wait But Why. […]

  413. […] I found this article helpful. It’s about why we procrastinate. For some reason the naming of the Dark Playground, and realising how many people spend their time there, felt like joining an Anonymous Procrastinators club where no Instant-Gratification monkeys were allowed. Read on: Why procrastinators procrastinate […]

  414. […] make me the unique snowflake I am—until I read these two articles by Tim Urban of waitbutwhy.test: Why Procrastinators Procrastinate and How to Beat […]

  415. […] Here’s an info-graphic presenting the DNA of a successful book, and Tim Urban discusses — with illustrations – why procrastinators procrastinate. […]

  416. Maz Avatar
    Maz
    Hide

    I can identify with this post and loved it! EXCEPT for that one “4-letter-word” beginning with s… If you could change that word to something a little more reader-friendly, I would totally share this with every single person I know! (Pleeeeeeeeeeeeeeease! :D)

  417. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate and How to Beat Procrastination “The procrastinator’s problems run deep, and it takes something more than “being more self-disciplined” or “changing his bad habits” for him to change his ways—the root of the problem is embedded in his Storyline,…” […]

  418. […] Here is a much more clear and totally amusing explanation of procrastination.  […]

  419. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  420. […] info about procrastination, including the instant gratification monkey, at https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html and how to beat it […]

  421. […] But then, knowing I should be writing, but not wanting to write, I recalled this excellent article on procrastinating. I realized I was in the dark playground and needed to get back to the Dark woods via the critical […]

  422. […] in a dedicated post, which you may or may not find entertaining. (C) is described brilliantly in this post, which I stumbled upon during a typically anti-productive internet loitering session. And (D)? […]

  423. […] Needless to say, when Beckii told me that Greg had left a comment on our Wonderbao post inviting us to visit, we were super excited! Hahaha and we knew…it was time to put an end to our inertia and procrastination. […]

  424. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate […]

  425. […] you want to read about procrastination, why it happens, and what to do about it, I think you’ll enjoy this slightly irreverent, but very engaging […]

  426. […] interviews. I love how I’m framing myself to be a serious procrastinator. According to this blog, it’s because I have a monkey in my brain…I guess there are worse things to have in […]

  427. […] You may find the article here. […]

  428. Amy Gunther Avatar
    Amy Gunther
    Hide

    Genuinely terrified of the Panic Monster!

  429. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate | Wait But Why Reply With Quote […]

  430. Procrastinomore Avatar
    Procrastinomore
    Hide

    These two blog posts have been changing my life for the last two weeks. Finally I understand some of the mechanisms that have been going on in my brain and caused me to stagnate and struggle immensly whenever I’ve tried to get a project done. I’m getting things done for the first time now, and it looks like I’m going to be able to keep it up. I’m setting new routines and positive habits for myself when getting on with a task! Thank you so much!

    1. Wait But Why Avatar
      Wait But Why
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      Thrilled to hear it.

  431. […] asjade asemel hakkasin lugema ja alustasin FB mingit hala. Kõigepealt lugesin seda – Why Procrastinators Procrastinate. Jõudsin järeldusele, et ma küll olen harrastaja aga ilmselt mitte professionaal. Tõestuseks […]

  432. […] long enough. I’d like to finally shed some old habits that aren’t serving me anymore (hello procrastination and needless anxiety), and move forward with a new phase of my life. At this point, it’s still pretty unclear to me […]

  433. christa Avatar
    christa
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    Organized planners have a hard time understanding Procrastinators.But procrastinators can’t understand non- procrastinators.It causes us anxiety if the project is not done a week ahead of time.We always fear something would come up that would delay getting it done.

  434. Rebecca McMillan Avatar
    Rebecca McMillan
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    Amusing and insightful post!

    I think you may have missed a step. You know, the one where you do truly amazing and inspired work on other projects as a therapeutic form of procrastination on the project with the incredibly close, looming deadline.

    That’s how the whole dysfunctional system stays afloat year after year.

  435. […] Om du vill förstå hur en prokrastinerare fungerar till vardags, rekommenderar jag att läsa detta inlägg för enkel förståelse. Trots att det inte är ett vetenskapligt inlägg eller ens hundra procent […]

  436. […] перевод популярного блога Тима Урбана и Эндрю Финна Wait but why. Особенно прекрасны […]

  437. […] the end of the holidays, I came across an article about procrastination (https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html). This article really struck a lot of chords with me, and highlighted why my holidays were so […]

  438. Jeff Bell Avatar
    Jeff Bell
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    This is a very cool article. I have struggled with procrastination most of my life, so I do find this interesting.

    Here are two areas with regard to procrastination that I think are worthy of more consideration and exploration:

    1. There likely are “unconscious benefits” that those of us who procrastinate get out of procrastinating. Psychologists have a term for this: “Secondary Gain”, but I think it is a poor term that does little to clarify what is going on. Here is a simple example of what I mean by “unconscious benefit”, which I think will make it clear: Suppose I have chronic back pain. And suppose that I use that more and more as an excuse to get out of things that I really do not want to do, such as helping my mother in law rearrange her furniture every month or so, or taking my wife ballroom dancing. In both cases my chronic “bad back” allows me, (or we could even say gives me the benefit), of being able to say to my mother in law, “You know, Louise, I would love to come spend my Saturday moving the furniture all around your house. But, I’m so sorry, I’ve got this bad back so I can’t move your furniture. sorry!” Or, “Honey, I would love to take you ballroom dancing, but I’ve got this bad back and the doctor told me that things like dancing are just not safe for me.”

    In both cases I got to gracefully get out of something I really did not want to do, and I got out of them without having to be a “bad guy”. So that is a very real benefit from having chronic back pain.

    It seems to be a universal characteristic of human emotional functionality that when we are faced with some impediment, “negative condition” or anything that we consciously do not want, but which we seem to be stuck with for at least a significant length of time, our unconscious minds find multiple benefits from the condition. In my more than 35 years as a holistic health researcher and practitioner I have never seen any chronic condition where this is not a factor. And I have observed it in myself whenever I have had an injury or other limitation that lasted more than a day or so.

    Further, I have found that many measures that I expected to fix the primary problem rather quickly either do not fix it at all, or do so very, very slowly until or unless these unconscious benefits have been brought into the conscious and identified and then consciously released or renounced.

    I’ll bet that most procrastinators get unconscious benefits from the behavior. I am going to investigate this in my own case and see if it helps.

    2. Those familiar with Neurolinguistic Programming or “NLP” know that whenever we see a conscious decision to behave a certain way in order to achieve certain results, but where the person is actually behaving in ways that make the results unlikely or even impossible, there are unconscious beliefs at work that do not support the conscious choice but that lead to what look like self-sabotaging behaviors and choices. Again, I’ll furnish and example. Suppose someone is in financial stress. They could make conscious decisions and changes that seem like they should fix the problem, or at least substantially improve their financial circumstances. That’s pretty obvious, right? But then we observe that their actual behavior makes it almost certain that they will stay in financial distress.

    An NLP practitioner, or anyone who knows even a little about NLP might observe and ask a question such as: “What would John have to believe in order to want to have financial security but still work for far less than his he and his skills are worth?” If we ask questions like that and then sit in observant stillness and wait for the answers to bubble up, we likely will see things like: “I don’t really believe that I deserve financial comfort and security.” Of course, this is in the unconscious until you take the time and effort to uncover it and bring it into the light of day. Most people will not consciously choose poverty when they seem to have a choice. But the unconscious is another matter entirely.

    Again, it seems likely that there are unconscious beliefs that support procrastination. In fact, in the process of writing this, one just bubbled up to the surface for me: On at least some level I believe that if I stop procrastinating and become more dependable and predictable in terms of meeting deadlines that the people around me will come to depend on me much more. Then I am at greater risk than ever of disappointing them. That is scary for me.

    Just thought I would share these 2 crucial ideas. I hope they are helpful. Now I need to get back to the work I have been procrastinating and that I promised a couple of clients I would get done!

  439. […] части статьи Тима Урбана и Эндрю Финна, ведущих блога Wait but why о борьбе с прокрастинацией. Сегодня мы узнаем о том, […]

  440. […] the end of the holidays, I came across an article about procrastination (https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html). This article really struck a lot of chords with me, and highlighted why my holidays were so […]

  441. […]  Why Procrastinators Procrastinate […]

  442. […] corresponding popularity trends over time. The Voyager is delicious and rents permanent space in my Dark Playground. (Of course, as soon as it was the topic of this post, putting Voyager play time in the Dark Woods […]

  443. […] work, flew like a jet. My ADD and I did not do too bad although I didn’t completely manage to beat the monkey and I’m still late on many important dossiers. Sometimes that […]

  444. […] two-part series I recently encountered, “Why procrastinators procrastinate”, expertly deals with how to manage this aspect of the demon in day to day life, in its […]

  445. […] while reading about other more industrious and creative people who actually did. See this post on wait but why – thank you, […]

  446. […] Part 1: Why Procrastinators Procrastinate […]

  447. Karen Avatar
    Karen
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    Been there and done that!

  448. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  449. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  450. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate from Wait But Why – an interesting read! […]

  451. […] like how it gives each part of the procrastinating problem a different personality. Here is the article from the website […]

  452. […] yes, let’s make 2014 productive. Let’s conquer the monkey of instant gratification and get on with doing what we do best. But let’s make it meaningful too. We’ll do great things, […]

  453. […] via Why Procrastinators Procrastinate | Wait But Why. […]

  454. WEll written but... Avatar
    WEll written but…
    Hide

    I am not sure why you assumed that all obese people are overeaters, and people with depression just need to be understood.

  455. […] feel incredibly motivated to do each & every thing on this list. (It probably helped that I read this great piece on procrastination last night, and this one about using time wisely the week before.) From what I […]

  456. Self Avatar
    Self
    Hide

    Thank you, nice job and helpful

    Would write more but I’m working on some clinical records that need completing…very soon 😉

  457. […] “Part 1 of 2. The thing that neither the dictionary nor fake procrastinators understand is that for a real procrastinator, procrastination isn't optional—it's something they don't know how to not do.”  […]

  458. liz Avatar
    liz
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    This is a fabulous way to describe procrastination. It’s clear that this is a place you’ve lived for a while. Thank you for writing this. (am now going back to work as I am currently procrastinating. of course.)

  459. Matt Avatar
    Matt
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    This article addresses only the negative consequences of procrastination. Sometimes procrastination is the masterstroke of strategy. Think about a game of chess – or anything that it mirrors, a competitive endeavor with tactics of any kind – anything from a basketball game to a military engagement. Procrastination is not just “putting off to tomorrow that which you could do today”; it can also be formulated as “not committing prematurely to a consequential decision you do not yet have to make.” Great sportsmen, coaches, generals, and tacticians procrastinate all the time…

    The key is educating the procrastinator’s brain to do it when it is productive, and avoid it when it is inappropriate.

  460. […] got through a disc worth of Stargate Atlantis, finished reading a book, and started reading a fascinating blog post about procrastinating. It’s so long I got distracted, and so familiar that I had to tell everyone about it. (Then I […]

  461. […] decision to blog was spurred on in no small way by this brilliant article by Tim Urban: https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html which produced the dual effect of recognition, that: “You know, I could write this. I could […]

  462. Sam Avatar
    Sam
    Hide

    Oh my I love this post. Being able to break this down is something to be applauded. Great work

  463. […] this morning I woke up to find this article on my […]

  464. […] If you are a procrastinator: you will laugh till your stomach hurts […]

  465. […] I found this gem of an article: Why Procrastinators Procrastinate. I felt like it was written just for me. It really hit […]

  466. Anon Avatar
    Anon
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    What a wonderful article, thank you for this.

  467. […] https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html […]

  468. […] you do them and why you don’t do some things that you should do, please read this article. First part of the article explains why we procrastinate, and the second part tells us how to beat […]

  469. […] to leave an addiction? Procrastination is much easier done—for the procrastinator, his norm. See https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/10/why-procrastinators-procrastinate.html and https://wait-but-why-production.mystagingwebsite.com/2013/11/how-to-beat-procrastination.html for an interesting picture of […]

  470. […] me, the job needs me, the marriage needs me…sometimes I’m spending too much time in the Dark Playground  (I nodded my head about 9000 times reading that article) because I’m just overwhelmed at the […]

  471. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate […]

  472. Hide

    video games

    […]Every as soon as inside a while we pick out blogs that we read. Listed beneath would be the latest web pages that we opt for […]

  473. […] the keyboard…I quickly let myself get distracted by FaceyB first and then by this brilliant article. Read it. Now. Man that explains a lot! (and the title of this […]

  474. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
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    I find that my procrastination worsens the older I get. I am 75; in 5 years I won’t be accomplishing one single thing.

  475. Monkey girl Avatar
    Monkey girl
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    I love that drawing of the panic monster. I am sad watching my gifted daughter struggle with her monkey! she is so clever and was way ahead at first but now struggling with school coz they persecute her all the time for humming fidgeting and doodling which she actually can’t help? I ended up being excluded fro school for similar and never knew what I was doing wrong! I tried to the best of my ability but couldn’t ever do stuff on time! I would be told to tidy my room and get lost in a magazine and dream about a project etc the. Be in huge trouble for not listening, it has been a lifelong struggle for me and I have definitely not reached my potential but spent years planning and dreaming then getting ill with stress. I want to teach my daughter to conquer this so she doesn’t waste her talent.

  476. Harry Avatar
    Hide

    This is brilliant. And so accurate.

  477. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate, Wait But Why? […]

  478.  Avatar
    Anonymous
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    No I am not in the dark playground. I am on down time after a day of watching football where i used all the commercials and half time to do all my work that is prescribed for today AND tomorrow. I just wanted to come here for some insight into the procrastinator because i have a good friend who has it bad and I can’t relate. Most of all I just wanted a good laugh at how pathetic procrastinators are.

  479. […] you do them and why you don’t do some things that you should do, please read this article. First part of the article explains why we procrastinate, and the second part tells us how to beat […]

  480. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate – This post and its follow-up describe my life perfectly. The Dark Playground and the Panic Monster are concepts I am intimately acquainted with. (h/t to NTE.) […]

  481. […] Part 1 of 2. The thing that neither the dictionary nor fake procrastinators understand is that for a real procrastinator, procrastination isn't optional—it's something they don't know how to not do.  […]

  482. […] Why procrastinators procrastinate by Wait But Why […]

  483. […] reading an article on a new-to-me blog today (thanks again for the link, Sarah), I went ahead and made a concrete goal for the month of January. […]

  484. […] Why Procrastinators Procrastinate, How to Beat […]

  485. […] Next, and insanely poignant and accurate piece on Why Procrastinators Procrastinate. […]

  486. […] Behavioral interlude: Why procrastinators procrastinate. […]

  487.  Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    I hate you so much because this is a perfect description of myself, except you had to throw in this:

    “Why would we practice that instrument when it’s not fun?”

    Actually, practicing the piano is a Dark Playground activity for me. Sure, I get better at it, but only mildly so (it’s usually songs I already know, not new ones), and meanwhile I don’t get any real work done.

    This is probably why I basically haven’t played any games in the past year or so. Being perpetually in the Dark Playground, outright gaming feels way too cheap and I’d feel too guilty to actually do it (instead I waste my time on the Internet).

    Then again, I somehow managed to spend 4 straight hours writing a blog post that I was supposed to write last night, so maybe there’s hope. Maybe. This doesn’t happen very often.

    I shall now watch as I manage to spend at least 4 hours wasting time instead of spending the 1 hour doing the productive thing that I ought to get done ASAP (in this case, my periodic Kanji practice – which, as I’m using a spaced repetition system, gets worse and more work piles up the longer I leave it aside. I’ve just come out of 3 months of procrastination on it. I’m hoping I don’t spiral back into that again, but I’m not holding my breath.)

  488. Lisa @ The Meaning of Me Avatar

    A friend send me the link to this article this morning and I immediately headed for the Dark Playground, indeed. This is precisely how my head works. Laughed out loud all the way through (while crying on the inside because, of course, it’s so true). Going to the other side of the park now to read part two because, you know, all the things I really should have accomplished by this time today can wait just a little while longer.

    I am certain I’ll be back to read more here. 🙂

  489. […] to pay for gas regularly. In fact, I cringe at having any adult responsibilities, period. And the Instant Gratification Monkey is a constant, constant fixture in my life preventing me from doing anything productive, […]

  490. […] Instant Gratification Monkey […]

  491. Juuuust fine Avatar
    Juuuust fine
    Hide

    The finished product is everything. EVERYTHING. I include your physical health and happiness in the “product,” by the way. So the only problems with waiting until the last 72 hours to write your 90 page paper was (1) you fucked up your health and (2) the paper was bad. But unless you screwed up your health writing this post, your method worked perfectly. It did not matter that you paused before drawing the signposts. Not. One. Bit.

    Honestly, getting something done can be separated into the “information gathering” phase and the “putting that information to action” phase. Who cares if you spend 90% in the information gathering phase? Who cares if you take breaks? Who says you have to be 50/50? Fuck that noise.

    Finished product is everything. *drops microphone*

  492. […] So when I see someone come up with an interesting take on procrastination, I pay attention. Here’s a very good one: […]

  493. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
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    Writing my life with your words. Seriously. I laughed, I cried and I feel thankful for the realisation that I am not alone in having this issue. Allo my life and it’s incredibly depressing. It’s like having no impulse control. I head to my office and find myself walking upstairs to my room instead to play yet another stupid game on my iPad. I sit down at my desk and start working, but even when I am incredibly motivated I find myself INCREDIBLY bored after only a few minutes. I have wondered whether I have adult ADHD. The anxiety and panic attacks I get as a result of not being able to get out of the Dark Playground are beyond horrid. They wake me at 2am and propel me down the stairs back to my desk to work on something that should really only take 2 hours but ends up taking me all night. It’s shocking. Please keep writing about how you are addressing this – god knows it’s great to laugh at oneself but this year, I would really like to kick the Monkey in his fat, furry little face and get on with feeling like I am genuinely worthwhile and I actually have talent, instead of feeling like I am faking all the time!

  494. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    I have been like this since childhood and the cause was not a monkey, it was fear of not doing things perfectly or fear of not being liked-in the case of lack of participation.

  495. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    My panic monster has been working overtime this past year lol! I got so much accomplished all of a sudden.

  496. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
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    🙂 I am a procrastinator but with the panic monster in role from time to time 🙂

  497. Adam Hilson Hilson Avatar

    Why on earth you’ve to make it clear with a monkey? It’s so disappointing to consider a monkey in my head! Because I’m a procrastinator too!!! Damn it. But I’m getting recovered from this site….lol

  498. Katie DuBois Avatar
    Hide

    Sigh…. if this wasn’t so horrible it would be funny. Most of my life is spent in the Dark Playground and it took me days to even read this article. I would open it up and then the stupid monkey would remind me of some interesting video on Youtube or that I might have something I’m watching on Ebay end without bidding on it. I think he realized that my realization that I’m not just lazy, I’m a chronic procrastinator and it’s all his fucking fault might put his life in jeopardy. At any rate, I’m glad to see I’m not alone. Though, I wish my teachers would have cut me some slack. My panic monster is present, for sure, though it doesn’t like to show up until the very last second which is usually too late. He screams like there’s time, though, scaring the shit out of the monkey, me, and anyone unfortunate enough to be in my general vicinity. Is there really any hope in beating this? Really? I opened up Part 2 and immediately went back to Part 1 to read the comments.

  499. Ruth Turple Avatar
    Hide

    I put off going back to college until I was 50. I put off graduating until I was 56. I put off finishing going to school until I turn 61….next year. How did you get inside my head?

  500. Ska Aks Avatar
    Hide

    This is me. I am this. We are one.

  501. Nevyn Avatar
    Hide

    I have a friend who is *THE* perfect procrastinator. It frustrates the living crap out of me when I’m left waiting for HOURS for him just to get something done. Every Christmas it’s the same thing – everyone gets here… I have to call him up a little bit later. I try to be understanding, but seriously, it feels like he’s expecting me to wait around for him which infuriates the living crap out of me…No one ever thinks of the henchman’s family….

  502. OMFGITSROHIT Avatar

    I’ve been thinking of this article since I first read it. Your analogies are fucking genius. I’ve come to realize that the Instant Gratification Monkey is actually the id, the rational decision maker = the ego and the suffering procrastinator who berates him = super ego.

  503. yofa820 Avatar
    Hide

    What’s missing here is for me is the fear factor BEFORE the panic monster gets involved. Part of the reason why I don’t want to do a piece of written work is because I know what I produce will be judged by others. Anticipating that feeling and imagining that person reading my work and potentially finding it lacking often works alongside the instant gratification monkey to stop me writing anything. I’ve found that being less of a perfectionist and writing down whatever is in my head at the time is a great way of making progress rather than expecting everything that goes down on the page should sound great first time. I’ve been thinking this way since reading a book about procrastination which argued that procrastinators are at heart perfectionists which is why they don’t get anything done (presumably until fear of failing to hand in anything at all outweighs fear of being ‘found out’ as a bad writer/poor student). This fear of being ‘found out’ also helps to explain under achievement of procrastinators because they are afraid that their efforts will be judged and come up wanting. Do these ideas fit in with the model outlined above or can they be included in some way?

  504. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
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    Yikes! That hit home!

  505. Kevin Avatar
    Hide

    Prognosis is bad: took me 16 days to unfreeze this tab from my Chrome tab-tree and read this.

    1. Jason Avatar
      Jason
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      HAHAHAHHAHAHAAHA YES!

  506. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    Forget LOL, this was so hilarious I laughed so hard I cried! You gotta share this with Conan O Brian for the greater good! The drawings are priceless.

  507. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    Reading this at 745a Monday morning instead of starting work.AWWWW YEAAAAAAHHHHHH

  508. My Bad Self Avatar
    Hide

    “Discipline is remembering what you want.” Well said, comrade.My cousin sent me the link to this blog article (which appears to have been written only 12 days ago), as well as the link to the follow-up to it (Part Two). My cousin said the descriptions were spot-on, and that I’d really enjoy it. I knew from experience that both of these opinions would be validated: I knew the blog would be spot-on, and I knew that I’d enjoy it, because my cousin knows me like few others, and his opinions may be trusted.HOWEVER: unlike those of you who look forward to the weekly thoughts of this very talented thinker, I was unfamiliar with his/her work, and rather than fill a paradigm of Dark Playground for me, this blog and the other one (which I haven’t read yet) for me primarily represent the archetype of “Something I’m Supposed to Be Doing.” Therefore, though I received these links from my cousin two days ago, I’m not reading them until now, which is a victory of sorts, because if I’d waited any longer, I most likely would have never gotten around to it at all. Still, let’s not celebrate until I’ve read both parts, which is in no way guaranteed.By the way, I did read fairly closely all the comments made up to this point. One of the best forms of procrastination for me–my favorite, truth be told–is to turn simple tasks into forms of rocket science, thereby creating the illusion of “thoroughness,” which most would say carries a connotation of “productivity,” which thereby delays the total collapse of my self-esteem another hour or two. For example, I tried very hard not to post a response, because I knew I would get carried away and write waaaay too much, and then feel bad later for making bad decisions. Yes, I tried very hard not to post a response, and succeeded in delaying having posted this response by an estimated 40 seconds.FURTHERMORE: meanwhile, I’m feeling terribly guilty for not reading the draft of my good friend’s novel that he sent me two months ago–another project that I know I’ll enjoy–ONCE I GET STARTED. Unfortunately, since reading my friend’s novel draft is on my official To-Do List, it automatically becomes associated in my brain as yet another Something I’m Supposed to Be Doing (instead of as something I make willing sacrifices to experience as soon as possible). Thus associated, reading his novel becomes yet another valuable project I instead willfully put off for fear that I’m forgetting something else I’m “supposed” to be doing, or for fear that it won’t be as good as I thought, or for fear that it will be so good that I’ll feel bad for not writing a novel myself, etc., etc.What’s my point? I have two. FIRST, I would say that procrastination has destroyed my life, except that I am 100% certain that procrastination is a symptom of the conditions that did the damage, not the cause in and of itself. To wit, as one of the commenters mentioned above, other factors in our pasts are as much to blame as any of us individually. [And since my full post just got rejected for being too long, I shall continue this in reply to myself. In case you’re curious, the limit is 4,096 characters. You can see why I’ve never used my Twitter account.]

    1. My Bad Self Avatar
      Hide

      [Cont’d from above, due to character limit. Great. Now my character is even more limited.]Permit me to expound upon my first point. These days, “personal responsibility” seems vogue to propone, but for anyone with even a passing understanding of brain chemistry and emotional development, “personal responsibility” should be obvious as simply the modern version of a phenomenon far older than even written history itself (and we know this because the earliest writings we have already refer to it as ancient). The phenomenon is that of the village scapegoat, better known nowadays as “blaming the victim.” Since any manageable rubric of life requires some modicum of unquestioned optimism, all humans who aren’t patently suicidal are living on some unconscious level with the axiomatic belief that the “universe” (if not outright even God Her- or Himself) is on some level “just,” meaning that “justice” is somehow an inherent characteristic of existence. Humans by and large ARE capable of believing that life is NOT ALWAYS fair, but we are fundamentally INCAPABLE of believing life is NEVER fair.Humans are unable to entertain seriously the notion that “fairness” is a concept with no reality outside of necessary human conceptualization. Even I, myself, here and now, can talk and write about existence as being devoid of inherent justice, but if I truly believed that, I would stop typing right now, because that would mean that any attempts toward human communication and empathy are absurd and futile. Am I right? Can I get a witness?Didn’t I have a point? Didn’t I have two? Fine, if you insist, here’s my first point in a nutshell: humans necessarily live with hope that we can control our destinies, even at the expense of the dignity of those among us who are failing to do just that. If you’re failing to live on your own terms; if you’re failing to determine your own destiny (as I am); you needn’t get too discouraged (as least not immediately). Despite how we may sometimes see ourselves, and despite how others may sometimes see us, the evidence indicates that people like us are in fact NOT moral degenerates without self-control or sense of propriety. That would be reprehensible. We’re much better than that. We’re just plain-old vanilla losers.[Are you laughing? Aren’t I a riot? I was more fun at parties before I quit drinking, so if anyone finds this depressing, they are free to blame it on my sobriety from alcohol (four years this past July 9th). Better yet, let’s blame it on the caffeine, Wellbutrin, and Adderall I’m on right now, because if I weren’t hopped up on stimulants, I’d have long ago died of sedative overdose. Better yet, let’s blame it on the doctors who prescribed them, or on the mother who sent me to the doctors, after she screwed me up as a child with her misdirected, pathological resentment of my absent, clueless father. Ah, yes, that’s it: the father. Let’s do blame the father, shall we?]My SECOND (and final) point is this: since I only now am reading this blog, written 12 days ago, then I won’t have to wait a week to read the follow-up. See? Procrastination is good; procrastination is not only the filter by which we discover what truly matters, but also our insurance that we’ll never be embarrassingly early to parties that don’t require our attendance.

    2. My Bad Self Avatar
      Hide

      PS: Although I had the original, sincere intention of jumping straight to Wait But Why for the answer to avoiding procrastination, the above commentary (1,139 words, or 6,506 characters, including spaces) has now taken over three and a half hours of my prime procrastination time. Besides, 210 minutes of uninterrupted typing/editing on any couch–even a comfy one like mine –becomes terribly uncomfortable, and may even result in injury, without a dedicated period of abstention. Therefore, I’m leaving now at 2:38AM Pacific Time to walk my wonderful two aging dogs through the dark, damp streets of my suburban neighborhood, while listening to my Sansa Clip set to FM radio, which, at this very moment, is playing the Divertimento in E flat, K 563, by Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus, as performed (according to the station’s website) by Henning Kraggerud (violin), Lars Anders Tomter (viola), and Christoph Richter (cello). EQUALLY IMPORTANT: I cannot overemphasize the profound effect upon one’s priorities, and in turn upon one’s habits of procrastination, of a task being moved from the status of something one does INSTEAD of what one is “supposed to be doing,” to the status of being on the Official To-Do List. Now that I’ve made this post–I’m NOT joking—the task of reading and responding to the follow-up blog (the next Wait But Why) is now “Something I’m Supposed to Be Doing,” and therefore a prime object of procrastination. I’m sorry, seriously, if you enjoyed anything I’ve added, and had been perhaps hoping for more. I guess you’ll just have to (wait for it, wait for it)—I guess you’ll just have to…er…wait. As one of the commenters pointed out, the price paid by the procrastinator is compounded by the chaos, inefficiency, and frustration that We Procrastinators inject into the lives of others. The Good News, if you were hoping for more, is that it is now 3:00AM Pacific Time exactly—the proverbial “middle of the night”—and chances are good that by the time you read this, what had been my Dark Playground will have already manifested an opportunity for your continued self-ruination.

  509. carlos Avatar
    Hide

    Thank you very much. This hit home.

  510. Ximena Rosenvasser Avatar
    Ximena Rosenvasser
    Hide

    Great!!!!

  511. Dingbat Avatar
    Dingbat
    Hide

    I just wanted to say that you drew a fantastic signpost.

  512. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    I love this, its nice to know I’m not the only one. In case any of you haven’t already seen this Hyperbole and a Half post, it also will probably make you nod sadly in recognition:http://hyperboleandahalf.blogspot.com/2010/06/this-is-why-ill-never-be-adult.html

  513. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    The “I procrastinate because I can” guy here.I guess maybe I don’t understand something. To me “procrastination” is when you unnecessarily put something off and instead let the IG monkey drive, but eventually (usually at the last minute) you get that something done. That’s what I do. I still get things done and they’re typically of good quality….I just do them in a hurried rush right before they’re due.What I see expressed often in these comments is something entirely different. When I see “procrastination ruined my life” and similar comments, the only way I can see how that happens is if you put things off, but then don’t do them. In my mind, that’s not procrastination; that’s being irresponsible. IOW, “procrastination” = “puts things off until the last minute”“Irresponsible” = “puts things off and never does them”See the difference? In “procrastination”, the key word is “until”. Yeah, it’s at the last minute and you caused yourself a lot of undue stress by waiting, but you still got it done. If you never get it done, you’re not procrastinating; you’re just irresponsible.So even though I’m a chronic procrastinator, it would never even occur to me to simply not do things. And btw, my co-workers are now calling me “the personification of the instant gratification monkey”. Yep, I’m that guy who comes into your office and says, “You gotta see this!”

    1. Anonymous Avatar
      Anonymous
      Hide

      I think you have this backwards – if you think about it it’s pretty irresponsible to put things off till the last minute, assuming you don’t have to.I’m already ashamed of my procrastination thanks – I don’t need to be shamed about it more.

  514. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    I want some magic trick

  515. Sonya Avatar
    Sonya
    Hide

    We need the second chapter very much)

  516. Unknown Avatar
    Hide

    it’s Tuesday, where is the post?

    1. Wait But Why Avatar
      Hide

      I procrastinated throughout the week, so it won’t be up until tonight.

    2. Sonia Avatar
      Sonia
      Hide

      I was hitting the refresh button for the last half an hour at work. Thanks for replying. We are waiting…. with our monkeys on our shoulders. Oh-the-pressure! Good luck! 🙂

    3. Anonymous Avatar
      Anonymous
      Hide

      Why not post it at all? Amazing how angry procrastinators can make others. I have in the mean time gone elsewhere on the web in search of how procrastinators answers for this problem – there seems to be only attempts by people who think they know… So do you? If you did, then the article would have been finished.Your comment: “Of course, this is no way to live.” – You live like this…Also is it interesting that in the 3 reasons you give on why the behavior has to change are all self-centered. You totally forgot about how irritated others get because they cannot rely on you. We’d like strive toward predictability and you are screwing this up. You are unpredictable.As per your reason 1 you know that this was going to be unpleasant.

  517. aaron philby Avatar
    Hide

    Im eagerly anticipating your next post.

  518. Inn Mohar Avatar
    Hide

    u;re right. only a true procrastinator will understand this. totally. shite.

  519. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    “A lot of you are probably reading this article while in the Dark Playground.”You are absolutely right. Oh God, why….

  520. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    This is a great post … EXCEPT … equating depressions with apathy is really, really far afield. Kind of frustrating to a person (me) who struggles with it a lot. A person with depression may give the appearance of apathy, but that’s not the whole story. It’s kind of like saying a procrastinator is getting a lot done: look at them checking the fridge! checking their email! drawing pictures of their IG monkey!!!Many of us depressed folks feel like we care a lot more than the people around us do. Sometimes I even find myself wanting to withdraw (therefore appearing apathetic) just to avoid (what appears to me at that moment to be) the shallow, self-serving apathy of others. Please note the parentheses and don’t flame me. 🙂

  521. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    I am still a chronic procrastinator and will always fight the trait, but 20 years ago I managed to actually study for my graduate school oral exams for a period of 6 weeks by taping this sign over my TV screen: “Discipline is remembering what you want.” (I passed). Today with the Internet, it’s much harder.

    1. Anonymous Avatar
      Anonymous
      Hide

      “Discipline is remembering what you want.” That is so good I came back to dig through the comments to find it and copy it down. Thank you, Anonymous. I have to tape that over my ipad screen.

  522. OMFGITSROHIT Avatar
    Hide

    You, my friend, are fucking awesome.

  523. Carl Bartlett Avatar

    It’s all so painfully true

  524. Jennifer Stelco Avatar

    And in reading this I have procrastinated further. On the plus side it has energised me to get some work done… after a short stint on youtube. Then facebook. Then youtube again. Looking forward to next week’s article for obvious reasons. x

  525. acoustico15 Avatar
    Hide

    I completely saw myself in this! And it really freaked me out… Thank you for delivering this message in a light-hearted comic-like medium, and softening the blow, or I might have gotten rather depressed : P. To fellow compulsive procrastinators out there, have any of you managed to deal with your procrastination, and win against it? I’m getting concerned, because for many years now I’ve had serious issues with procrastination–and now, those well-worn habits are threatening to jeopardize my career as a graduate PhD student. If something doesn’t change soon, I could very well get kicked out the program! Any advice would be greatly appreciated!

  526. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    This. Is. Me. It’s like you read my past or something. And spun it into something hilarious.

  527. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    Thank you. Gained more insight from this than I did a recent counseling session set up solely to find out how to overcome this monkey. The counselor has an adult brain and no monkey. Looking forward to Tuesday’s continuation.

  528. gunmetalgeisha Avatar

    I’m just gonna say it: I love you.

  529. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    How to get rid of the monkey? procrastination.ca

  530. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    This article is a riddle. The answer to the question of how to rid of or work with the monkey is hidden within the article itself. Right?

  531. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    Welcome reader, yes u made it to the actual bottom of this thread. If this should not be the bottom of this thread anymore the great procrastination monkey god is asking u to write a good post. U can only avoid to write a post by not reading on those comments. The great Monkey God is furhter willing to do You, dear reader, a great favour. If u brush ur teeth and lie into Your bed he wants to let You sleep immidietly. Should You have found this text before 23:00 and would normally go to bed at 3:42 the great Monkey god is willing to let u sleep anyways. Good night…nighty night… (yes this is supposed to be a poemic stop-codon)

    1. somewhereinfrance Avatar
      somewhereinfrance
      Hide

      Here’s an idea. Instead of procrastinating with no fixed objective, how about going through what you’ve written, and correcting the spelling and punctuation. It would be “procrastination with a purpose” and therefore one step in the right direction.

  532. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    Great post! I love the Panic Monster, as an ex-procrastinator on the mend I could really relate to it. I’ll look forward to your next post, but I hope you’ll also cover some psychological backgrounds…Besides just our personality types, there are usually family history etc reasons underneath procrastination.

  533. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    I thought you were amazing when I read your GYPSY post, but you’ve outdone yourself this time!

  534. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    First footnote: yup.Second footnote: kudos on ever getting your thing done. You give me hope for myself!…*stares blankly at this page for like 15 minutes, thinking about stuff and things*…Screw it, I’m gonna go home and take some Ritalin. Panic Monster’s been making me hide instead of running lately so I’m pretty much useless unless pumped full of drugs >_

  535. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    this is my favorite thing ever written in the history of the written word. thank you for articulating (and illustrating!) the inside of my brains. i’m glad i’m not alone.

  536. apsychologist Avatar

    correction of “It’s probably a more difficult problem than planning ahead.” Not being able to live in the present is probably a more difficult problem than not knowing how to plan ahead in an efficient way.

  537. apsychologist Avatar

    Hi. Yes, you are brilliant. Yes, are extremely creative. Yes, these attributes contribute to your problem. Yes, it is a real problem. I am a Feuerstein trained psychologist who knows how to help people with issues such as yours. For starters, you have a cluster of traits that would make you an excellent psychologist. As far as remediating your deficiencies, you need to work on such skills as prioritizing, categorizing, and planning behavior. In a nutshell, you need to follow the advice of Rabbi Avigdor Miller: Just say “no” to yourself. IT IS NOT EASY. IT IS NOT FAST. BASICALLY, IT REQUIRES AN EXTREME AMOUNT OF SELF DISCIPLINE. YOU DO HAVE THE ABILITY TO DO IT. YOU DO USE SELF DISCIPLINE WHEN YOU FINALLY WORK ON A PROJECT. Learn to plan ahead in baby steps. Do it in the smallest steps you can possibly imagine. It is the way to break any habit. Give yourself a huge amount of credit for any progress you make and forgive yourself for failing. This is a huge long term project. Actually, it is a great skill to be able to live in the present. It’s probably a more difficult problem than planning ahead. Good luck.

  538. Sonia Avatar
    Sonia
    Hide

    Absolutely loved it! My monkey took full charge of my life during my first year of grad school. It was excruciatingly difficult for me to take charge of my life again, but I did it. Even now I often spend a lot of time in the dark play ground and absolutely hate it. But I try to push myself a little harder every time, and sometimes, I beat the monkey without the help of the panic monster. Thanks for the wonderful post. I am Eagerly waiting for the next post.

  539. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    Felt like I was reading about Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) which has much in common with chronic procrastination. You are brilliant. (Another ADD commonality). Very curious what next week’s post will bring… 😉

    1. Anonymous Avatar
      Anonymous
      Hide

      Exactly! This is largely describing the ADD brain. I’m surprised more people did not make that connection. For ADD, procastination is the symptom of the distraction. And we have to learn to hyper-focus when the panic monster comes out. The monkey relating to instant gratification is a fun way to look at it. However, the ADD brain is not significantly connected to gratification as much as just a monkey bouncing around creating static in the brain. Either way, I hope tomorrow brings good tips on handling both the static and the procratstination!

  540. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    I would love to understand our reason for letting the monkey take control. For me, it was being overwhelmed and intellectually over-challenged at an elite US engineering school after coming from a small town college in Europe. I only got into the extremely fancy university because I can present myself very well and had a super-prestigious fellowship for the same reason. Obviously, that did not help me with research or classes. Seeing most people around me understanding the material while I was sitting there just not getting it made me very frustrated. I started procrastinating. However, I do not procrastinate when I love what I’m doing. I only do it, when I hate my work or job – like right now. It’s quite irrational really. After all, one does not really enjoy the time on the dark playground as the panic monster could wait for you behind every corner. As described in the article, I’m always half scared on the dark playground. It would be so much better just to get the darn work done and then go to the real playground without the monkey.Maybe an exploration in the psychology of what caused the monkey to appear in the first place would be in order. Maybe some people can throw the monkey over board when they find the reason how he made it there.I’d love to know what your monkey’s reasons are to appear on your deck in the first place? Again, my monkey jumped on board when I landed in elite-university harbor with my little fishing boat between all the sailing frigates.

  541. solomonfaust Avatar

    Procrastination pretty much derailed my life. I became increasingly immune to the spurs panic monster and got stuck in that tree for endless night after endless night. Basically, after several excruciating three years of gradual deterioration, I ended up failing a Bachelor of Arts I’d started with straight distinctions because I simply couldn’t submit work. Whenever people asked me why I was struggling, I’d say depression or anxiety in the hope they’d take me seriously rather than just assume I was lazy. Depression and anxiety eventually came too, but they were both products of that vicious cycle. Your description of it is spot on. Thanks for talking about this as the serious, crippling issue it is for some people rather than just a quirky annoyance.

  542. ron boyer Avatar
    Hide

    Takes a wee bit longer for all those electron thingies to get down the wire to Western Australia, so I don’t get this till now….Thursday night, then it’s golf on Fridays, then the weekend, so it’s Monday before I can put any of this stuff into practice and by then I’ve forgotten anything I might have read 4 days ago. Not sure if that’s what you’d call procrastination but it frustrates the shit out of me.

  543. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    This is a really healthy exploration. You are on the right path.

  544. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    Your procrastination is my profit… say youtube, facebook, wimp, twitter, tumblr. 99% of the content on these sites is the “Dark Playground” for us…

  545. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    thankyou for this post, its has really helped me realize my pattern of thinking. thankyou.

  546. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    Hi, my name is G and I’m a procrastinator. I graduated uni with a GPA of 0.95 because half way through the course I stopped responding to the Panic Monster and started shutting down before due dates. As a result I failed and had to redo more than half my subjects and ended up with uni fees multitudes more than what normal people pay. I have a job now but nothing has changed. I don’t know it it ever will.

  547. Cole Hauptfuhrer Avatar

    I knew you were a kindred spirit, judging by your shifting subtitle – and “new post every Tuesday” is probably perfect, because posting twice a week at this quality would probably kill you (or, as tragic, your monkey).Just make sure you give the monkey its due: you’ll never see a non-procrastinator dream up anything as inventive as this blog, because it’s impossible to dream if you’re a one-dimensional doer. (The trade-off, as you’ve said, though, is that the potential will probably never be actualized so the procrastinating creative will probably never achieve peace of mind.) As they say: the Instant Gratification Monkey giveth, and the Instant Gratification Monkey taketh away.Can’t wait for your thoughts on how the hell to tame him.

  548. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    This is my dark playground.Yes, I am at work.

  549. LD Avatar
    Hide

    I have to go to a meeting as a national representative in 15 minutes, and haven’t finished my prep reading. But I read this 😉 Damn you, monkey!

  550. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
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    This is so brilliant! Bravo! Looking forward to next week’s post!!

  551. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    As a lifelong procrastinator, I loved this post. But now that I’m into my mid-40’s, I’ve discovered that the reason I procrastinate is because I can. I’m generally smart and creative enough that I can crank out an acceptable product in flurry of last-minute activity. Sure, I could spend 3 or 4 days working on it and tweaking it until it’s done, but whenever I’ve done that I’ve found that the difference between it and the stuff I do at the last minute is negligible. As a result, I can pretty much goof off 3-4 days a week (like reading this site), work in short bursts, and still be considered one of the more productive people at my office. I’m sure if I weren’t as creative and/or intelligent, I would HAVE to do things differently, because whatever I would do at the eleventh hour would suck and I would suffer the consequences (bad performance reviews, firings), which eventually would cause me to change my behaviors. But as it stands…I procrastinate because I can.

  552. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    Actually, I couldn’t agree more. Great blog!

  553. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    Wait you’re going to make me wait a week before telling me how to fix my life?!

  554. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    4 papers due in 2 days. Instead here I am reading this. I am dead.

  555. el_monty Avatar
    Hide

    Genius

  556. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    Procrastination is a luxury. It is very mich a firstt world issue.

    1. Anonymous Avatar
      Anonymous
      Hide

      No it’s not

    2. Anonymous Avatar
      Anonymous
      Hide

      Dear know it all, I don’t live in a first world country and trust me we procrastinate here too… Also it’s not a luxury. You didnt’ get the article at all.

  557. one more Avatar
    Hide

    The worst part for me is postponing doctors’ appointments. I have so many I should visit and I never get around to it. I think one of my moles is about to turn into skin cancer, seriously.Why do you make us wait until next week for part 2????

  558. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    Thank you for giving me a language to describe my vicious cycle. You actually described it so perfectly that I am a little pissed off that I have to wait til next week to hear the end of the story. Which then makes me wonder…did you put it til next week because the monkey says its okay? =)Seriously though, this might have changed my life. Thank you so much.

  559. Caroline V Avatar
    Hide

    im scared…i need to shoot that motherf****** monkey

  560. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    Busted. Accurately, totally, unquestionably busted.

  561. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    You captured it perfectly. Now I understand the phrase “monkey business”! With that kind of insight I’d love to hear your thoughts on “ok, what now?”.

  562. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    Just happened yesterday when I had to give a presentation for university and haven’t started until … the night before? Also – haven’t started writing my bachelor thesis until 2 days before deadline (and yes, I managed it, and yes, I scored okayish). Y U DOING THIS INSTANT GRATIFICATION MONKEY

  563. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    I just signed onto the mallist and, in view of today’s post, was HIGHLY amused to find that it is managed by “MailCHIMP” (emphasis inserted).

    1. My Bad Self Avatar
      Hide

      @Anonymous: Before I’d read your post yesterday (24+ hours ago), I’d never heard of “MailChimp.” If you’d asked me, I’d have wagered the words “mail” and “chimp” were syntactically incongruous, and had likely never been used in the same sentence together, ever, in the entire history of the English language, much less used together in the same compound word.Then, as I was working last night, listening to the same classical radio station I’ve listened to a thousand times before, what do you think I heard? You guessed it: “Tonight’s program brought to you in part by MailChimp…”Isn’t that cool? No? Maybe we should look into this…You’d think I’d learn to expect the unexpected. Fortunately, humans are surprisingly adept at overlooking inconvenient data, such as evidence that our existence is fully comprised by a quantum web of universally interconnected inevitability that if acknowledged would invalidate not only our concepts of choice, self-determination, and dignity, but also any notions of right and wrong, hope, or anticipation. Did I say “fortunately?” In truth, such acknowledgement would also have advantages, such as neutralizing fear and shame, and all perceptions of loss, regret, sadness, and despair. That might be a profitable trade, depending on how my day was going.William James (father of Pragmatism as a movement in philosophy) once wrote, “The art of being wise is the art of knowing what to overlook.” Would William James have commented on MailChimp’s sudden brand-proliferation? Perhaps the dual appearance of MailChimp in my world only SEEMS to indicate the existence of a universal interconnected web of cosmic inevitability. If we presume the universe is infinite, we may safely also presume that anything is possible. Whew! Don’t bother checking my math. If I’ve overlooked anything significant, I assure you I would have noticed. [See what I did there?]Similarly, Albert Schweitzer (theologian, physician, and medical missionary) wrote this: “Happiness is nothing more than good health and a bad memory.” If that’s true, then I thank my lucky stars I haven’t learned to expect the unexpected. Let’s I hope I never do. Except for stock market crashes (if I ever own stocks). Or pedestrians entering the roadway when I’m operating a motor vehicle. There’s nothing wrong with defensive driving. Right?What about “defensive living?” What if MailChimp is an NSA surveillance platform? Should I fear this possibility, or overlook it? Perhaps I’ve already overlooked it in the past, and I’ve been happier all this time because I’d forgotten. Wisdom and happiness may be incompatible. Let’s overlook that possibility. Entertaining dangerous ideas is procrastination in the extreme.I’ll stop now. Carry on.

  564. Mike Avatar
    Mike
    Hide

    It’s like you’re in my head, calmly observing my instant gratification monkey while he does his thing, keeping my life a constant exercise of extinguishing fires only as a result of the tireless efforts of my panic monster (who is woefully overworked). Kudos on an excellent post. That you are able to churn out these wonderfully written, thought provoking and entertaining posts as regularly as you do is a testament to how far you have come. Good on you. The follow through is an obvious and marked departure from the worst kind of procrastinator. You’re in much better shape than some of us out there. As to the omitted over-indulgent-and-excessive-masturbation-that-makes-you-question-your-own-sense-of-sexual-propriety tea cup ride, I find it usually sandwiches both sides of the depressing nap action slingshot as well as being disproportionately interspersed throughout the measure of time spent in the dark playground, often built into travel time from one productivity wasteland to another. Thanks for brightening my day and being a constant beacon for the monkey to steer towards.

  565. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    This is easily the best blog on the internet….if I was creative enough to write like this, I probably would be writing about 75% of the topics that you have touched on. So spot on, can’t wait for next week. Let’s see if I can get some work done on MY thesis this week!

  566. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    This blog is everything that I am.

  567. iwonttakeit Avatar
    Hide

    Currently trying to stay out of the Dark Playground. Not being all that successful seeing as how I’m at work…Tomorrow will be better. Yeah, tomorrow…

  568. exquestation Avatar

    my procrasturbation is at dangerous levels – so much so i’m lost in a weak fountain of nothing

  569. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    I totally climbed the tree in college and didn’t come down. I want somebody to chop down the tree and kill the monkey.

  570. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    Absolutely Brilliant!! I haven’t laughed so hard in quite a while.

  571. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    I read this article with the voice of the Panic Monster. My panic rose with every paragraph as I tried not to glance over at the project that is due later today.

  572. The Internet and The Unicorn Avatar

    you have best blog ever! I hang onto every word.http://theinternetandtheunicorn.blogspot.com/

  573. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    “* A lot of you are probably reading this article while in the Dark Playground.”So busted…Oh, and I work from home. My entire life is the dark playground.

    1. Tehreem Avatar
      Hide

      plus 1..!

  574. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    So right on about the procrastinator. I’m typing this comment sitting in my bed with a list of things-to-do, and thinking about YouTube-ing last night’s X-Factor.

  575. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    You forgot about reddit highway built nearby your dark playground!

    1. Anonymous Avatar
      Anonymous
      Hide

      Reddit takes up a huge percentage of my dark playgound time.

  576. Pam Collins Avatar
    Hide

    I am the total opposite of a procrastinator, but I feel for you – that is not a fun place to be at all – thanks for explaining it in such a coherent way. Also, you might spend lots of time in the dark playground, but your posts are brilliant and I look forward to them every week (or almost every week 😉

    1. Anonymous Avatar
      Anonymous
      Hide

      Ok if u are no procrastinator how did u got this far in this particular article? 2nd thought – if u do it for somebody else maybe u sent him/ her just hte article

  577. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    Guilty as hell! Definitely in the dark playground!

  578. waitingfortheworld Avatar

    love this so much. Literally wait for this all tuesday for it to enter my dark playground!

  579. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    This Blog has become part of my dark playground…I have to slap my monkey! ;-/

    1. Biffster Avatar
      Biffster
      Hide

      I see what you did there. 😉

      1. imwithstoopid Avatar
        imwithstoopid
        Hide

        I don’t want to see.

  580. Mat Avatar
    Hide

    “So how can a procrastinator improve and become happier? That’s the topic of next week’s post.”I see what you did there. :)As a career procrastinator, I simply found that line amusing. That’s part of the self-loathing thing, though. You learn to recognize what might appear to be excuses for the type of behavior you yourself own, and get that certain little twinge of guilt at knowing that you may just use that line in as a defense.In any case, I thought it a very cogent article. I’ve only recently become less of a procrastinator. It might be chemical, it might be age, it might be the stresses of being a father for thirteen years – whatever it was, I highly value the level of patience and perseverance I’ve recently been able to attain.I can’t stress any more than you already have, however, that procrastination isn’t something someone intentionally “does” as much as it is who they “are”. Brilliant point there, I have to say.Looking forward to next week’s installment.

  581. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    Hide

    Where is the unnecessary masturbation Food court??

    1. Wait But Why Avatar

      I remembered that my grandmother recently learned that this blog existed and knows how to access it.

    2. Samuel Zamora Avatar

      Hahaha… thats a pity!

    3. Kimberly Davis Avatar

      The Instant Gratification Monkey is a Bonobo.

    4. Anonymous Avatar
      Anonymous
      Hide

      “unnecessary” masturbation? I don’t follow.

      1.  Avatar
        Anonymous
        Hide

        As in, you have nothing left to do so you just masturbate. you’re not horny or anything. it’s just a way to pass time.

    5. Anonymous Avatar
      Anonymous
      Hide

      yes this

    6. Anonymous Avatar
      Anonymous
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      This is a great post … EXCEPT … equating depressions with apathy is really, really far afield. Kind of frustrating to a person (me) who struggles with it a lot. A person with depression may give the appearance of apathy, but that’s not the whole story. It’s kind of like saying a procrastinator is getting a lot done: look at them checking the fridge! checking their email! drawing pictures of their IG monkey!!!Many of us depressed folks feel like we care a lot more than the people around us do. Sometimes I even find myself wanting to withdraw (therefore appearing apathetic) just to avoid (what appears to me at that moment to be) the shallow, self-serving apathy of others. Please note the parentheses and don’t flame me. 🙂

    7. Anonymous Avatar
      Anonymous
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      Oops … put that don’t-say-we’re-apathetic post in the wrong place … sorry.

    8. My Bad Self Avatar
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      Am I the only one who needed to look up “bonobo?”bo·no·bo /bəˈnōbō/ n: bonobo; plural: bonobos 1. a chimpanzee with a black face and black hair, found in the rain forests of the Democratic Republic of Congo (formerly Zaire).[Kimberly: Quelle coïncidence. I registered for “Blogger” just last night in order to respond to this blog. I wondered why some people have photos by their replies and happened to click on yours first. What are the chances the first profile I happen to explore belongs to a person who attended the same university I happen to be attending? Weird. Small world. I’m a senior in Accounting/Finance, by the way. Also, per the topic of this blog (I’m not kidding), this is my fourth year as a senior. It’s okay, though. I only have one year left.]

      1. imwithstoopid Avatar
        imwithstoopid
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        The Bonobos are also the only simians that known not to fight among themselves and share. We are like all the other groups, wouldn’t you know it.

    9. My Bad Self Avatar
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      @Anonymous: “…’unnecessary’ masturbation? I don’t follow.”Walking my dogs one day, listening to my Sansa Clip FM radio, NPR’s Splendid Table did a show on “leftover wine.” By the time I got home, I was so confused I googled the phrase (with quotes).Wikipedia said, “Leftover Wine is a live album released by Melanie in 1970.” That made the confusion worse, so I dug deeper. I found a few jokes about “spare change,” and a reference to punk rock group, “Leftöver Crack,” but nothing to explain what NPR meant by “leftover wine.”I used to think I was smart, but that episode truly broke me. Some mysteries I just can’t solve.

    10. Unnecessary masturbator Avatar
      Unnecessary masturbator
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      Unnecessary masturbation was my go-to to relieve the stress and pressure of all the college work I had to do that I wasn’t doing because I was stressed lol… dark pattern. It relieved my stress but also made me feel tired and more like sleeping rather than focused and excited about doing work, as I ideally should be. Ritalin would have helped, or if I cared more (apathy). While I knew the problem and the solution was to simply “work”, the work didn’t seem fun or interesting, so I didn’t have the emotional heart/gut buy-in to do it, because I was taking classes I was forced to take for General Ed. even though I really wanted to just study business in college. I felt like I was doing high school all over again, which was a waste of time and therefore, unnecessary.

  582. The Dude Avatar
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    My wife sent this me with the comment “it’s YOU.” She was underselling.

  583. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
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    just realized how reading this article caused me to procrastinate.

  584. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
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    I was trying to work and then I said to myself “Well it’s tuesday, let’s check wait but why !”. Damn Monkey