Everytime it feels like he judges me more.

  • surrendertogravity@wayfarershaven.eu
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    1 year ago

    now I’m curious what the click-bait title pays off with. Is the answer “figure out what emotions you have around the thing, feel through them, then just do the thing”?

    • God@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      I asked ChatGPT to summarize it into 2 sentences:

      The video suggests that the cure for procrastination is embracing boredom and removing all distractions, making the task at hand the only available “entertainment”. By changing our environment and eliminating the “back doors” our brain uses to escape tedious tasks, we can trick our minds into perceiving these tasks as more engaging and fulfilling.

      I then asked it to turn it into a blog format, pasted it below if you’re curious.

      Click to read

      The Unconventional Cure for Procrastination

      We’ve all been there, staring at a task we know we should be doing but just can’t seem to motivate ourselves to start. It’s not that we’re clueless about what needs to be done. Instead, we face a powerful feeling of resistance when it comes to tasks that are good for us. This resistance can make such tasks feel utterly boring compared to the multitude of distractions available at our fingertips.

      The Problem with Common Strategies

      A common thread in self-improvement advice tends to focus on various tactics to trick the brain into getting the job done – setting timers, trying to shift our thoughts towards positivity, and so forth. However, these strategies often lose their effectiveness after a while. So, is there a surefire strategy that consistently works?

      The Unlikely Solution: Boredom

      Ironically, the answer is both the problem and the solution: boredom. The truth is, our brains don’t perceive entertainment in absolute terms. It’s all relative. Think of it as akin to our perception of light. After spending hours in the sun, a dimly lit room seems extremely dark. Alternatively, if you wake up in the middle of the night and turn on the lights, they’re blinding, even though they’re the same as they were before you went to sleep. Our brains work on contrasts and comparisons.

      Applying the Boredom Principle

      Applying this principle to overcoming procrastination, the key is to eliminate distractions - the ‘back doors’ your brain is using to escape the ‘boring’ task. If you sit in a room with no phone, no games, no other options, you’re likely to start on the task you need to do, simply because it becomes more entertaining compared to doing absolutely nothing.

      Backing up this theory, a study published in Science in 2014 showed that people prefer to electrocute themselves rather than sit alone in a room with their thoughts – a stark indicator of how much we humans detest boredom.

      The Power of Environmental Conditioning

      One of the most productive periods of my life was when I lived in a small basement with no distractions, and all I had to do was edit videos. The lack of distractions made editing videos feel entertaining and fulfilling. This personal experience aligns with the concept of our brain making whatever our only option is as entertaining as it needs to survive boredom.

      The Strategy in Action

      So, if you’re struggling with procrastination, consider this: eliminate all distractions and back doors. Turn off your phone, hide the toolbar on your computer, make your task the most ‘entertaining’ thing available, and watch how your perception changes. You might just find it makes your life more fulfilling and engaging than ever before.

      Remember, productivity isn’t about denying ourselves entertainment; it’s about changing our perspective on what is truly entertaining and fulfilling.

      • CarbonIceDragon@pawb.social
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        1 year ago

        I feel like this is underestimating my capacity to get so absolutely engrossed in and distracted by my own imagination that I don’t even pay attention to what my eyes are seeing. I can’t exactly turn off my thoughts after all.

        • God@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          I am like that. I have a job, I can’t do it most of the time because I’m on Lemmy or Reddit or YouTube or Overwatch, etc., but if I really really need to do it, I close everything, and open it again, then close it again and basically torture myself into focusing on it, and by the time I realize, I’m kinda focused on it, until I’m too tired and then that’s it, I can’t focus any longer for the rest of the day.

        • Notyou@sopuli.xyz
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          1 year ago

          No. I think they covered it with that study about electrocuting yourself instead of being alone with your thoughts.

          I would probably give it a shot too. I used to electrocute (might be the wrong word) myself when I worked at BK. The shake machine had a metal part you could touch while mixing it and it gave you a little shock.

      • Deebster@lemmyrs.org
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        1 year ago

        Did you give it the transcript, or is it just guessing based on the title? AFAIK, ChatCPT can’t watch videos yet.