60-Second Procrastination Rule
A technique that helps bridge the gap between procrastination and action by acknowledging stress and making a behavioral change within 60 seconds, encouraging immediate engagement with tasks.
Last updated: 2026-03-18 19:51
Overview
The 60-Second Procrastination Rule is a psychological technique designed to combat procrastination by requiring immediate action within 60 seconds of recognizing a task or feeling stress about it.
How It Works
When you acknowledge stress or identify a task that needs doing, you commit to taking action within 60 seconds. This might mean:
- Opening the relevant document or application
- Writing the first sentence
- Making the first phone call
- Taking any small step toward task completion
The Psychology
The 60-second window is short enough to bypass the mental resistance that builds up with prolonged contemplation, yet long enough to initiate meaningful action. By acting quickly, you prevent overthinking and analysis paralysis.
Benefits
- Reduces mental resistance to starting tasks
- Prevents overthinking and anxiety buildup
- Creates momentum through immediate action
- Builds a habit of responsiveness rather than avoidance
- Particularly effective for small, quick tasks
Implementation
Combine this rule with the One-Minute Rule: if a task takes less than 60 seconds to complete, do it immediately rather than adding it to a list. This prevents small tasks from accumulating and creating overwhelming backlogs.
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