Celebrating 25 Years

Q: “Am I Tricking Myself into Thinking Busy = Productive?”

A whimsical, stylized illustration featuring a woman marking off an item on a comically long to-do list that loops around her and trails off into the distance. Image generated by AI.

Q: “How do I know if I’m engaging in ‘procrastivity’ by keeping myself busy with unimportant tasks instead of making progress on harder, more important ones? How can I hold myself accountable over how I use my time?”


Procrastivity happens when you avoid a high-priority task by engaging in a lower-priority, less time-urgent activity. It can be tricky to tell if you’re in this state because the less-critical task you’ve escaped to (perhaps unwittingly) is still beneficial. Regardless, procrastivity is most often self-defeating and often hard to cease. Here, learn how to check in with yourself to ensure that you’re focusing on what’s most important.

1. Is the task on your to-do list?

It’s a straightforward question that will force you to be honest about how you use your time. It also underscores the importance of having a prioritized to-do list and an implementation plan for your tasks.

[Get This Free Download: The Eisenhower Matrix to Learn Prioritization]

Take the task of tidying your workspace. If this is not on today’s to-do list, and yet you’ve found yourself doing just that in lieu of other tasks, then it’s a clear-cut case of procrastination. But what if tidying your desk is on your list? If there is anything else on your list that needs more immediate attention and carries significant consequences if delayed or unfinished — like that major project due tomorrow — then you know that choosing to tidy is a form of procrastivity.

A prioritized list is not enough; you need an implementation plan that specifies not just what tasks you’ll do, but when and where. You can plan, for example, to put the finishing touches on your project at 2 pm. If you’re doing anything else at that time, then you’re procrastinating.

2. Are you rationalizing?

Procrastivity distorts your thoughts and tricks you into believing that you’re being productive. If you have any of the following distorted positive thoughts 1 while engaging in a task, then you know it’s procrastivity talking:

[Read: The Everyday Rationales That Let Procrastination In]

Practice checking in with your thoughts as you perform tasks. The more you do this, the more likely you’ll catch yourself when you do engage in procrastivity and get back on track.

Busy vs Productive: Next Steps to Combat Procrastivity

The content for this article was derived from the ADDitude ADHD Experts webinar titled, “Unraveling ADHD Procrastivity: How to Outsmart Procrastination and Improve Productivity” [Video Replay & Podcast #501] with J. Russell Ramsay, Ph.D., which was broadcast on April 18, 2024.


SUPPORT ADDITUDE
Thank you for reading ADDitude. To support our mission of providing ADHD education and support, please consider subscribing. Your readership and support help make our content and outreach possible. Thank you.

View Article Sources

1 Knouse, L. E., Mitchell, J. T., Kimbrel, N. A., & Anastopoulos, A. D. (2019). Development and evaluation of the ADHD Cognitions Scale for adults. Journal of Attention Disorders, 23(10), 1090–1100. https://doi.org/10.1177/1087054717707580

Updated on October 3, 2024

Exit mobile version