Paul Walters

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Am I A Chronic Procrastinator Or Simply Just Lazy? You Be The Judge.

Am I A Chronic Procrastinator Or Simply Just Lazy? You Be The Judge.


A few weeks ago I wrote a piece on procrastination which resulted in a slew of comments where I was accused of being lazy, or as one person put it, bone idle!

This actually set me to thinking about the difference between procrastination and idleness and, after much deliberation I have decided that it’s pretty much a neck and neck race.

Let me elaborate.


os

CAN'T SOMEONE ELSE
JUST DO IT?

Koalas, sleep 18 hours a day and don’t feel guilty, they chew away on their eucalyptus leaves until satiated and then hang about doing not much else. Are they lazy? On the surface it would appear so, but really they look pretty happy to me and are still one of the most adorable creatures on earth.

I can only envy such laziness as I struggle to get out of bed.

When I ran an advertising agency I made a point of observing my staff's habits during the course of a working day and noted some, on their arrival at work  would take them at least until morning tea to tackle their inbox and to-do list. When I sought them out for work related projects they were usually the hardest to find.


os

CAN'T SOMEONE ELSE
JUST DO IT?


That inherent laziness probably followed them home where household chores remained neglected, the gym abandoned in favour of the television, and their car hadn’t been washed since, well, ever.

So what laziness?

Some of the boffins at the university of Aberdeen in Scotland have identified a gene known as SLC35D3, which apparently dictates how lazy we actually are.

 The gene was discovered in mice that walked only a third as much – and, even then, at a more leisurely pace– than their peers. This reluctance for activity resulted in weight gain and other metabolic issues. That same gene has since been found in humans, although the research is still in its early stages.

So assuming that the chaps at Aberdeen are correct, laziness is a genetic affliction to be overcome.


os

CAN'T SOMEONE ELSE
JUST DO IT?

One could perhaps start with that procrastination activity which entails making a  ‘to do’ list which would read something like this.

Get up!

·Write a to do list for the day

·Organize your day around that list

·Take a fitness class!

·Paste the list somewhere prominent and refer to it regularly

Now this is a good start except that even writing the list requires energy, which is sadly lacking in your average lazy person.

I have recently come across a wonderful group, which I plan, on joining (as soon as I can manage to get round to doing so,) they go by the rather appealing name of, ‘The International Institute of Not Doing Much’.

os

CAN'T SOMEONE ELSE
JUST DO IT?


Their core value statement reads as follows, “We shall slow down in the office and on the roads. We shall slow down with growing confidence when all those around us are in a shrill state of hyperactivity signifying nothing.”

There’s truth to the hyperactivity reference.

In his book, In Praise of Slowness, Carl Honoré is careful to say he doesn’t condemn speed. “Speed has helped to remake our world in ways that are wonderful and liberating,” he writes. “Who wants to live without the Internet and jet travel?"

Our love of speed, our obsession with doing more and more in less and less time, has gone too far; it has turned into an addiction, a kind of idolatry.”

We scamper from meeting to meeting, in some sort of ruthless need to compete and to win; we embrace multitasking even though most, if not all are terrible at it, and we relentlessly do stuff without contemplating its value.

Laziness has negative connotations, often rightly associated with procrastination and not getting things done.

I prefer different adjectives which should run along the lines of, ‘thinking time’, ‘mindfulness’, ‘contemplation” or any other word that ‘implies’ that the individual is somehow doing something.


os

CAN'T SOMEONE ELSE
JUST DO IT?



Christopher Morley a writer from the early 19th century, referred to laziness as ‘philosophical laziness’.

He wrote: “The lazy man does not stand in the way of progress. When he sees progress roaring down upon him he steps nimbly out of the way. The lazy man doesn’t pass the buck he simply lets the buck pass him by.”

Be honest, we have always secretly envied our lazy friends and the question to ask is; are we are going to join them?


My thanks to James Adonis for some of the reference material quoted here

Paul v Walters is the author of five novels. When not afflicted by laziness and procrastination he writes for several leading travel journals and vox pop magazines around the world.

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Komentar

Javier Cámara-Rica 🐝🇪🇸

7 tahun yang lalu #7

CC Jos\u00e9 Jord\u00e1n de Urr\u00edes

Paul Walters

7 tahun yang lalu #6

#9
Thanks@ Aurorasa Sima Glad you like it !!

Paul Walters

7 tahun yang lalu #5

#2
Thanks Teresa much appreciated

Paul Walters

7 tahun yang lalu #4

That would be Daniela sorry for the typo

Paul Walters

7 tahun yang lalu #3

why thank you Deniel

Mohammed Abdul Jawad

7 tahun yang lalu #2

All work, and no leisure and merriment will turn us into a lethargic physical entity. Perhaps, when people become simply lethargic, they breed worse scenarios. Becoming lethargic is like drowning self and idling away precious time. Let’s be active, and not time-wasters, with our vain procrastination that spoils our spirits and passions.

Dean Owen

7 tahun yang lalu #1

"The International Institute of Not Doing Much" I certainly had to check them out! Very funny website.

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