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Journaling to break the cycle of procrastination

Psychologies UK

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May 2025

Discover where your habit of putting things off began, and learn how to change unhelpful habits with this simple exercise, writes Jackee Holder

Journaling to break the cycle of procrastination

A few weeks ago, I caught myself enjoying the process of completing my tax returns. For years, January had been a month of dread: scattered receipts, last-minute scrambling, a chaotic rush to get everything in order. But over the years something has shifted. Last year, as I sat inputting my receipts, I noticed I was relaxed. Was I actually lost in the moment, taking in the patterns of the numbers populating the screen? They no longer felt like an overwhelming mess. Instead, they had a rhythm, almost like tap dancing on the page. And then it hit me, I was enjoying a task I had always procrastinated over.

This wasn't just about taxes. My past resistance to tasks like these wasn't about the task itself, it was about the emotional weight I had attached to it. My dad was self employed, and often scrambled at the last minute to gather his receipts. Funny then, how I found myself doing the same. And that's the thing about procrastination, it's rarely about the task, it's about what the task means to us. Procrastination is not just a bad habit, it's often an emotional and psychological response to something deeper. This month I want to explore this with you. Because getting on top of procrastination isn't just about productivity. It's about freeing yourself to live a fuller, richer, more alive life. Grab your notebook or your notes app as I have some prompts for you.

Let's start with a simple list. Where do you tend to procrastinate the most?

• Work projects?

• Creative pursuits?

• Financial tasks?

• Health and wellness goals?

• Household duties?

• Personal care?

MEER VERHALEN VAN Psychologies UK

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