5 neuroscience-backed tips for beating procrastination
“I don’t know why I’m procrastinating on this.” I hear this constantly from people who are clearly motivated, clearly capable, but stuck on one important project. It’s been on the...
Source: www.fastcompany.com
“I don’t know why I’m procrastinating on this.” I hear this constantly from people who are clearly motivated, clearly capable, but stuck on one important project. It’s been on their list for weeks. They see it every day. They know it’s important. And yet, week after week goes by with no progress. Their prescribed fix? Wake up earlier. Be more disciplined. Push through. That almost never works, because the diagnosis is wrong. What’s actually happening isn’t procrastination at all. It’s cognitive overload. And treating it like procrastination is why so many smart, driven people stay stuck. In cognitive overload, your brain goes on defense When you’re cognitively overloaded, the prefrontal cortex (the part of your brain responsible for focus, judgment, and executive function) goes offline, and your more primitive limbic system takes over. Stress hormones like cortisol spike, preparing your body to act on instinct rather than careful consider