Use the Triple Check Method to jumpstart your brain
Briefly

Procrastination is often perceived as a personal weakness due to centuries of productivity moralization. Instead of viewing it as a flaw, it should be seen as a signal to address underlying issues. Anne-Laure Le Cunff introduces 'The Triple Check Method,' a tool designed to identify the root causes of procrastination. By recognizing personal patterns of concentration, individuals can rewire their response to procrastination. This approach challenges societal norms that tie self-worth to productivity and encourages a more nuanced understanding of procrastination's role in our lives.
Because of the efficiency worship that we have developed in our industrial age, we are now seeing procrastination as a character flaw rather than what it is, a signal that is worth listening to.
Procrastination has become a little bit of a dirty word, and that's because we have just been through hundreds of years of moralization around productivity and work.
We have all agreed to tie our self-worth to our productivity, and so not being productive means that you're being lazy, you're not contributing, you're not being useful and helpful to society.
Le Cunff introduces 'The Triple Check Method,' a diagnostic tool to understand the root cause of procrastination and how to rewire against it.
Read at Big Think
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