On ProcrastinationIf good things come to those who wait, what happens to those who keep others waiting? A slightly overdue defense of procrastination.
On ProcrastinationIf good things come to those who wait, what happens to those who keep others waiting? A slightly overdue defense of procrastination.
"Procrastination is the symptom, not the disease."
The irony of this essay is implicit in its subject: Not only did I procrastinate before writing it, but everyone reading this essay—with the exception of my editor—is procrastinating by reading it. There is something better you should be doing. By something “better” I mean something utilitarian: paying bills, finishing homework, cleaning dirty windows, getting a colonoscopy, etc. From this claim arises several assumptions:
First, we only procrastinate that which is both painful and necessary; we wouldn’t procrastinate throwing ourselves on a hot spike because we would never do so. Unless hot-spiking was for pleasurable ends, in which case we wouldn’t procrastinate.
Second, what is necessary is often painful: paying bills, finishing homework, cleaning dirty windows, getting a...