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Procrastination is often framed as avoidance of what we don’t want to do. But in this conversation, it becomes clear that it shows up just as often in the things we
do want to do—the work that matters most.
That’s what made this discussion with Jon Acuff so compelling. Jon’s latest book, Procrastination Proof, doesn’t treat procrastination as a flaw to fix but as a pattern to understand—and ultimately, to work with rather than against.
Six Discussion Points
- Procrastination isn’t a laziness issue—it’s a pattern driven by time, task, fear, history, and ego
- Permission can unlock progress more effectively than pressure or discipline
- Smaller actions reduce friction and make consistency sustainable rather than forced
- Review is the most overlooked multiplier—it reveals truth, direction, and better decisions
- Planning is where optimism meets realism—and most people get stuck between the two
- Alignment between “night you” and “morning you” turns intention into action without resistance
Three Connection Points
What stood out most in this conversation is that procrastination isn’t something you defeat once—it’s something you learn to navigate. When you shift from forcing action to understanding patterns, the work changes. And more importantly, your relationship with the work changes. That’s where real progress begins.
If this episode resonated, I’m exploring ideas like these more deeply in my upcoming book, Productiveness. You can follow along as it takes shape at mikevardy.com/productiveness.