What procrastinator are you - and how to fix it now (not later)
•What procrastinator are you - and how to fix it now (not later)Image source, Getty ImagesByMichelle RobertsDigital health editorPublishedJust nowI'll just do that later, this thing can wait, maybe a s...
•We've all been there: putting off certain tasks then being left with essays up to the wire, loads of messages unread and that bedroom sort-out that just never happens.A fifth of us are guilty of regul...
•Hedonist or a thrill-seeker?
هذا الخبر من BBC Health. خبر يقدم أدوات ذكاء اصطناعي للتلخيص والترجمة والاستماع.
What procrastinator are you - and how to fix it now (not later)Image source, Getty ImagesByMichelle RobertsDigital health editorPublishedJust nowI'll just do that later, this thing can wait, maybe a short break first... We've all been there: putting off certain tasks then being left with essays up to the wire, loads of messages unread and that bedroom sort-out that just never happens.A fifth of us are guilty of regularly procrastinating but the type of procastinator we are can reveal something deeper about us, say researchers.Are you a dreamer or rebel? Hedonist or a thrill-seeker? What does it all mean, and can you fix it?Why we procrastinateThe cause can be hidden or buried, says Dr Itamar Shatz, a lecturer at Cambridge University who is publishing a book on the subject this week.Understanding what procrastinator you are can really help, he says.According to Shatz, people can be any of nine types, external, sometimes simultaneously.Dreamers, for example, fantasise about the future too much, while rebels feel a lack of control and so procrastinate in protest. Hedonists care too much about immediate pleasure, thrill-seekers enjoy a deadline at their own peril and zigzaggers switch too often between tasks.The other types also embody their names - worriers, pessimists, perfectionists and burnouts who are tired from working too hard.Workplace psychologist Ian MacRae, from the British Psychological Society, says labels are fine, as long as people understand these are not permanent character traits. "I would recommend people think more in terms of 'oh, I'm acting like a perfectionist today' instead of thinking 'I am a perfectionist'.Prof Fuschia Sirois, a renowned expert in the field at Durham University, rejects categories, and says the main reason for procrastinating is usually the same - to dodge bad feelings. "We are not procrastinating the task, we are avoiding the unpleasant emotions associated with it," Sirois expl...المصدر: BBC Health | Source: BBC Health
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This article was originally published by BBC Health. Khabr is a licensed Jordanian AI-powered news platform (Registration #82086). We add editorial value through: AI-powered news analysis, automated summaries, AI audio narration, multi-language translation (Arabic, English, French, Turkish), and AI fact-checking. Our mission is to make news more accessible and understandable for Arabic-speaking audiences worldwide.



