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You are here: Home / Goals and Productivity / When You Can’t Make Yourself Work On Your Goal

When You Can’t Make Yourself Work On Your Goal

January 28, 2013 By: Barb Raveling

This post may contain affiliate links. View our disclosure policy here.

IMG_0396Do you ever feel like you just can’t make yourself work on your goal no matter how hard you try?

I feel like that on a regular basis.

Last week my list told me to do three hours of paperwork, and I was struggling. Here’s what I did:

The Good and Bad List

I made a Good and Bad List. My idea was that if could see the consequences of my actions (remember the Bible study last week?), I would actually want to do my paperwork.

It worked. I did my paperwork cheerfully (!!) for three hours. Here’s the chart I made in my journal. It contrasts the rewards of following through on my goal (the good) with the consequences of not following through on my goal (the bad):

A Life of Procrastination A Life of Following the List
  1. Always stressed
  2. Overwhelmed.
  3. Things don’t get done in time.
  4. Keeps me from feeling free to do other things because it’s always in the back of my mind.
  5. Desk is always messy. 
  6. A low-grade chain around my neck.
  7. I’m not “getting rid of all my belongings” like God says to.
  1. That amazing feeling that comes with an empty desk.
  2. No more negative energy wasted on thinking about what I “should” be doing.
  3. Easier to stay caught up.
  4. Will love others better because I’ll write notes to people right away.
  5. Will feel more free to get out and serve in the community if I’m caught up at home.

Can you see why I actually felt like doing my paperwork by the time I was finished with the list?

If you want to give this a try with your own goal, make a chart and start filling it in. First, write the consequences of your current way of operating in the area of your goal. Then write the benefits of the life you want to live. Then compare them.

Let me know if your desires change!

P.S. Here are some other helpful posts on procrastination: 45 Bible Verses for Procrastination, 9 Questions That Will Help You Stop Procrastinating.

Question: Think of your goal. Would it help to look at the benefits of changing and/or the consequences of not changing?

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Comments

  1. Elizabeth Archer says

    January 28, 2013 at 7:39 am

    I don’t know why it’s so hard when the rewards are so great! I like your lists, I had made mine good and bad about the goal, when procrastination is the real reason I’m avoiding it! I like to pray before I begin anything that I find stressful, I am amazed at how well it goes if I remember to do that. It’s horrible how often I just dig in to do something I’ve procrastinated on and forget to ask His help/blessing. He always blesses my work when I ask! (((HUGS)))

    • Barb says

      January 28, 2013 at 9:17 am

      Thanks for that reminder, Elizabeth. I often forget to pray which is crazy. When I remember, everything is so much easier. I’m far more likely to do the project with His motives, His help, and His fellowship.

  2. tcavey says

    January 28, 2013 at 9:06 am

    It certainly does help to look at things like this. Really puts it into perspective. I like that you added you will have to do this again. So often we think doing something just once will create in us a better habit, but it doesn’t.
    I get like this with cleaning my car out. Often I have a few changes of baby clothes, tons of toys, a few pair of baby shoes and his cups in my car. Each time I clean it out I think to myself “I’m not going to let it get like this again” but I do.

    • Barb says

      January 28, 2013 at 9:13 am

      Haha, every time I clean out my car, I end up thinking, “Why did I clean out my car?” because I end up needing something I just cleaned out of it!

  3. Dan Black on Leadership says

    January 28, 2013 at 11:09 pm

    Great perspectives. I find making a mental list of the positive things that would happen after completing my goal very compelling when it comes to doing it. I have to fight procrastination though.

    • Barb says

      January 29, 2013 at 2:44 pm

      I’ve actually made a similar chart three different times in the last couple of weeks now for paperwork and I almost have it caught up now – it’s helping me with procrastination! That’s great that you do it already in your mind. I need to do that!

  4. Loren Pinilis says

    January 30, 2013 at 1:48 pm

    I think listing out these benefits is a great thing, but the key here – what you did implicitly – is to link your current actions to the desired benefits. So often, we fool ourselves into thinking that, yes, we want the good benefits – but that it doesn’t matter if we slack off a little bit now.
    Great stuff.

    • Barb says

      February 1, 2013 at 5:26 pm

      Yes, I think that’s a common way to feel. Making a conscious effort to think of the consequences of procrastination and the benefits of changing my ways help me get out of that rut of thinking it’s okay to slack a bit now – since slacking becomes a way of life.

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