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I'll do it right now: The problem with precrastination

Mareike Steger
26.10.2023
Translation: machine translated

Precrastination means always wanting to get things done immediately. Unfortunately, these are often unimportant tasks - and you lose the ability to live fully in the moment. But there is a remedy.

You may be familiar with this from your own painful experience: writing theses, cleaning the flat, going for a dental check-up - all things that can easily be procrastinated. But did you know that the opposite of procrastination also exists? I asked Christine Hoffmann, occupational psychologist and coach in Vienna, about this.

Mrs Hoffmann, why is the opposite of procrastination, i.e. precrastination, hardly known?

Christine Hoffmann: Precrastination has a better reputation in our meritocracy: it is seen as desirable to complete tasks quickly. People who precrastinate are seen as hard-working and can be relied on. And people tend to talk about problems rather than the good things. Procrastination becomes a problem at some point, after all it is simply noticeable when to-dos are done later or even never.

**What does it look like when someone procrastinates? **

**Some people manage this - but others prefer the wrong tasks? **

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Mareike Steger
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oliver.fischer@digitecgalaxus.ch

I could've become a teacher, but I prefer learning to teaching. Now I learn something new with every article I write. Especially in the field of health and psychology.


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