Death Of 1000 Cuts - Season 2 Episode 37 - Chatting With Tim Pychyl
13 snips
Oct 8, 2018 Dr. Tim Pychyl, a psychologist and procrastination expert from Carleton University, dives deep into the emotional roots of procrastination. He clarifies the difference between necessary delays and true procrastination, highlighting how emotions, not time management, drive this behavior. Tim discusses brain science, linking procrastination to an overactive amygdala and provides practical steps to combat it. He emphasizes the power of identifying small actions to break the cycle of delay and shares how self-forgiveness can transform motivation.
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Voluntary Delay Despite Harm
- Procrastination is a voluntary delay of an intended act despite expecting to be worse off for the delay.
- Tim Pychyl emphasises that not all delays are procrastination; culpable unwarranted delay captures the essence.
It's An Emotion Management Problem
- Procrastination is not primarily a time-management issue but an emotion-management problem.
- Avoidance reduces negative emotion short-term (negative reinforcement) but backfires later.
Why Writing Invites Delay
- Writing is vulnerable to procrastination because rewards are delayed and uncertain, and people discount future rewards.
- Intransitive preferences make us keep deferring tasks to 'tomorrow'.









