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Course Review

SuperHuman Academy Procrastination Course Review

I have recently taken the SuperHuman Academy's Procrastination course (not sure how to link – I can't view the course if I am not logged in. Also – their affiliate system buttons don't work, and telling them didn't help, so there are no affiliate links here). 
The course is just a few hours. Since I have a chronic procrastination habit, I have seen other courses and books on the subject, but the course contained a lot I didn't know yet, as well as very interesting perspectives on old topics.
Price: as the course is not available on their page, I have no idea what the price would be. I got it as a full SuperHuman Academy bundle I got with a discount last year.
Some of the things I liked from the course:

  • Procrastination is not rest – it decreases energy, anxiety and affects your world view, making you think you are a procrastinator, and that there is nothing you can do to change that.
  • Procrastination is a self-protection mechanism from the conflict between a high desire for success but high fear of failure. It also comes from the fact that you get a instant reward from avoiding doing something you don't want to do – so you get a dopamine hit when you procrastinate, just like an addictions.
  • You should start habits as small as possible, as just relying on motivation mostly doesn't work. Committing to tiny things daily – such as doing a single push-up or putting your gym clothes – work better than trying to commit to larger things, which you can easily find excuses for.
  • You should have SMART goals – specific/measurable/achievable/relevant/time-bound (this one is quite popular, must be 3rd-4th time I have seen it).
  • Break down your goals – if you don't have clear steps, that will cause a great opportunity for procrastination to appear.
  • Get aware of your procrastination, by paying attention every time you do it, and taking notes of why you did it (obviously, as well as you understand it). Awareness will develop over time as you cultivate this habit. Some examples: distractions, dreading the activity, energy levels, thinking you can't do it, etc.
  • Be aware of the “what-the-hell effect” – when you do something you shouldn't, think “what the hell”, and make it worse. Such as eating a cookie, then going and eating a whole box because you already broke your diet.
  • Get a growth mindset, and reframe failure as every time you fail, it is an opportunity to learn, not a reflection on you sucking. Different countries actually have more or less of this baked into their culture, which affects their entrepreneurship rates.
  • Try to take on things you like doing, instead of things you think you should be doing (obviously hard, might even require changing your job). Delegate when possible. Procrastination can point out what you don't like to do, if it is not obvious.
  • Simplify things you do, something good that gets done is much better than the perfect one that doesn't.
  • When you are invested on things, it is less likely you will avoid them – you can invest money, emotion, safety, energy, reputation, etc.
  • Having deadlines can help
  • Ownership of problems helps puts the brain on problem solving mode – otherwise you might just feel sorry for your circumstances.
  • Manage your energy – sleep/nutrition/exercise/psychological state
  • Focus on starting, by planning to do something for just a limited time – many times you will realize it was note as bad as you thought and keep doing it. It also signals you that you do that kind of task. Quick wins can be build momentum. Pomodoro method is related.
  • Do the worst thing first. 
  • Batch tasks when possible – so you only have to overcome procrastination once per batch.
  • Whenever you have to stop an habit, go back as quickly as possible, but a lower level of intensity, so you don't get overwhelmed
  • Keep records of what worked and what didn't relating to procrastination.
  • Try to do positive procrastination when possible – such as instead of viewing cat videos on YouTube, view TED Talks. Then over time try to watch course videos. I.e. if you have to avoid doing something, try to avoid it with something better, that is actually useful.

This was a small fraction of my notes on the course, there was a lot of learn. Writing this post made me realize that I will probably have to watch the course again.
Overall, strongly recommended (as time spent goes – can't talk about cost-benefit, as price is unknown to me). There were things I was avoiding for years I got done, and I am much more aware of my procrastination now.

By Luiz A D R Marques

I've been developing software and selling it on-line since 1994. Current products include STG FolderPrint Plus - a tool to Print Folders, and STGThumb - HTML Album Generator, among others. Some of my other sites - Disk Usage, Directory Printer ,Print Folders and Jejum Intermitente .