Why we can't stop procrastinating, according to science
If you are constantly running late or finding yourself behind on deadline, admit it: You're a procrastinator.
And you're not alone. A study in Psychological Bulletin
by University of Calgary professor Piers Steel showed that the
percentage of chronic procrastinators has grown from about 5 percent in
1978 to 26 percent in 2007. (Other researchers have put more recent
numbers at around 20 percent, but it’s clear the problem is on the rise.)
So what's going on?
Part of the reason may have to do with technology, Steel
hypothesized. There’s so much to do online, and so many different media
at our fingertips, that putting off until tomorrow (and the day after)
what we could do today is almost natural. He estimated that new
technologies like email and mobile phones cost the U.S. about $70
billion in lost productivity a year.
Indeed, The Telegraph reported
that a survey by Webtrate showed that 60 percent of respondents who
looked at email or a social media ping in the middle of work forgot what
they were thinking about. Email and social media took away an hour of
productivity for about 36 percent of survey takers, and 16 percent lost
more than an hour.
But there may be more to it than that. A new study on twins published in Psychological Science
has found there may be a genetic link; the siblings in the study tended
to have similar self-reported levels of procrastination. Meanwhile,
another study in Current Psychology
argues that those who are more likely to leave things up to chance have
a propensity to wait until the last minute (or even later).
Dr. Philip R. Muskin, professor of psychiatry at Columbia University Medical Center, explained to The Week that
there is no official diagnosis of procrastination. Furthermore,
scientists have yet to find any definitive biological reason as to why
we so enjoy putting things off.
There are other reasons why we procrastinate, Muskin pointed out.
People tend to delay important tasks because they fear negative feedback
from others, which means dallying is a way to protect their
self-esteem. He added that our culture is also at fault, since it makes
failure such a taboo.
"If you think about not doing a term paper, or putting off sending in
your taxes to the last minute, it makes sense that the fear of getting a
low grade on the paper, the realization that one has to pay money to
the government are experienced as negative," he said. "Thus putting off
those tasks is protective, but the procrastination itself then leads to
adverse consequences. Rather than actively trying to solve a problem,
people who procrastinate avoid the problem all together."
On the other hand, some people enjoy procrastinating because they
like the rush of sweaty palms and heart palpitations when they are
running late.
"Some people 'enjoy' the thrill of waiting until
the last minute and accomplishing the task," Muskin said. "This type of
brinksmanship looks like procrastination, but the person is not
avoiding the task, just making it more of a challenge for herself."
If you want to kick the habit, Muskin suggested building up your self-esteem.
"What are you afraid of? Avoiding things does not help the fear, it
enhances the fear," he said. "The more attention you pay to the task the
better it will be and the probability of your fear coming true will be
lessened."