{"title":"How to Stop Procrastinating","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/productivity/how-to-stop-procrastinating","category":{"slug":"productivity","name":"Productivity"},"creator":{"name":"Ali Abdaal","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCoOae5nYA7VqaXzerajD0lg","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yBP1VjO9RSE"},"tldr":"Stop waiting for motivation. Use the 2-minute rule, the 5-minute rule, and the mind activation rule to beat procrastination and finally start the task.","totalDurationSeconds":461,"difficulty":"easy","tools":[],"materials":[],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Recognize Why You Procrastinate","text":"It's not laziness. It's present bias. Your future self can set any goal it wants - hit the gym, write the book, finish the side project. But your present self is the one who actually has to do the work, and the present self almost always prefers the short-term hit over the long-term payoff.Even the ancient Greeks had a word for this: akrasia, acting against your better judgment. Naming the bias is step one. Once you can spot the pattern in real time, you stop treating it as a character flaw and start treating it as a predictable shortcut you can plan around."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Treat It as Mood Management, Not Time Management","text":"Dr. Tim Pychyl, a leading researcher in the field, defines procrastination as the primacy of short-term mood repair over the long-term pursuit of intended actions. Plain English: you're not avoiding the task. You're avoiding how the task makes you feel.Next time you delay something, pause and ask which feeling you're really pushing away. Boredom. Anxiety. Confusion. Overwhelm. The feeling is almost always smaller than the avoidance behavior it triggers. Naming the feeling shrinks the task back to its real size."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Stop Waiting to Feel Motivated","text":"Most people get motivation backwards. They wait for the feeling before they act. Jeff Haden, in The Motivation Myth, flips that on its head: motivation isn't the cause of action, it's the result of action. You start the task, you make a tiny bit of progress, and motivation shows up to keep you going.Try dropping the word motivation from your internal monologue for a week. Replace it with discipline (energy you spend now) and habits (energy you've already invested). Pick one small action and start it before you feel ready. The feeling catches up after the action, not before."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Turn Discipline Into Habits","text":"Discipline is willpower you're spending right now. Habits are willpower you've already invested and don't have to pay again. Brushing your teeth doesn't take discipline because you've done it ten thousand times. The gym still takes discipline because it hasn't crossed the line into automatic.Pick the one task you keep avoiding and lock it to the same trigger every day - same time, same place, same cue. Repetition is the goal. After two or three weeks the action starts running on autopilot, and the willpower you used to spend on it is free for the next thing."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Cross the Action Line","text":"Steven Pressfield, in The War of Art, calls resistance a universal force whose only mission is to keep things as they are. Resistance peaks right before you start. Once you cross the action line, the pain of procrastination drops fast.Picture a ball at the top of a hill. You cannot get it rolling without that first push. After the push, momentum does the work. The trick is to stop trying to find the perfect plan, the perfect mood, the perfect setup. Just push the ball. The plan can improve while it's already rolling."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Use the 2-Minute Rule","text":"The 2-minute rule comes from David Allen's Getting Things Done. If a pending task takes less than two minutes, do it right now. Refill the water bottle. Wash the coffee mug. Reply to the one-line email. Put the laundry away. Don't add it to a list, don't schedule it, don't think about it. Just do it.This clears the small junk that piles up in your head, and trains your brain to associate a task with immediate action instead of delay. The mantra is short: under two minutes, do it now. Stick to that for a week and your mental tab count drops noticeably."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Trick Yourself With the 5-Minute Rule","text":"For tasks that will obviously take longer than two minutes, switch to the 5-minute rule. Tell yourself you'll work on it for just five minutes - and then you're free to stop. Some people call it the 10-minute or 30-minute rule. The number doesn't matter. What matters is the bar to start is low enough that you don't flinch.Ali used this rule to start filming the source video. Three hours later he was still going. That's the pattern. The hard part was never the work itself. It was the start. Once you're in motion, stopping at exactly five minutes feels weirder than continuing."},{"number":8,"title":"Step 8: Use the Mind Activation Rule","text":"The third rule is for the slumps. Most procrastination after lunch or in the evening isn't a moral failure - it's a low-energy state. When you notice the haze, do one thing that lights up your brain so the 2-minute and 5-minute rules have something to work with.Before 2 PM, a cup of caffeinated coffee tends to do the job. After 2 PM, switch to a non-caffeine trigger so you can still sleep: a short interactive lesson, a brisk walk, ten push-ups, a cold splash of water on your face. The point is to interrupt the slump, not to power through it."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-31T15:19:39.845Z","published":"2026-05-31T15:19:26.061Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}