Many of us struggle with procrastination and excuses.
Whether we don’t feel good, we feel we are too busy, we are afraid of the work and success that comes with it, or are just constantly distracted by life itself, many of us aren’t as productive as we could be.
We fall back on excuses of why we aren’t achieving as much as we felt we should be.
Do These Excuses Sound Familiar?
“I’m tired.”“I’m not as young as I used to be.”
“I have a family to take care.”
“I have young kids who constantly need supervision and attention.”
“I have elderly parents to take care.”
“I have important calls on my smartphone to monitor.”
“I’m working as hard as I can, and that’s good enough.”
Everyone has their own excuses of why they aren’t as productive as they feel they should be and why it takes them longer to complete projects and tasks than expected.
When people don’t want to tackle a task or a project, they make up an excuse of why they can’t do it at that time.
In other words, they procrastinate, always pushing something off until later that they could and should be doing now.
Bob