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Saying “I Will Do It In The Future” Is an Excuse for Failure 17comments
My office is a mess. I don’t feel like cleaning it – I’d rather play with the kids right now. So I say, “I will clean it in the future,” and I go play. A week later, my office is still a mess.
You’re not saving for retirement. You’re also spending as much as you bring in because you’re going out a lot and you just picked up a big HDTV and those car lease payments are whittling you down. So you say, “I will start saving in the future.” Five years later, you don’t have a dime in retirement.
I’m overweight. I was in pretty good shape, but my exercise routine was blown away by the writing, editing, and promotional work for my upcoming book. I’d like to run, but there is so much else to do. So I say, “I will go exercise in the future,” and I work on other things. A month later, I still haven’t started that exercise routine.
You’re in a truckload of debt, but there are a bunch of things happening this summer that you want to do. So you tell yourself, “I will come up with a debt repayment plan in the future.” A year from now, your debt situation is worse (if that’s possible).
I need to redo our will to account for our newborn son. It’s one of those “important but not urgent” tasks, so I’ll tell myself, “I’ll adjust the will in the future.” A month later, it’s still not done.
Going back to school. Looking for a different job. Taking charge of our spending. Kicking a smoking or a drinking or a drug habit. Rebuilding a relationship with our father or our mother or our sister or our brother.
There are countless things that we ought to be doing now, but instead of doing them, we simply say, “Our future self will do it.”
Guess what? Our future self is pretty unreliable, too. He/she doesn’t think that the task in hand sounds like much fun, either, and he/she is just as likely to put it off as you are.
Actually, your future self is even more likely to put it off than you are because you’ve already established a pattern that putting off that important thing is okay.
If you want to actually succeed in life, stop relying on your future self to take care of things. Now.
If you’re in debt and want to fix it, start fixing it now.
If you’re overweight, start eating better and exercising now.
If you’re not saving for retirement, set up retirement savings now.
If you want to get household tasks done, do them now.
Don’t find excuses to not do them because you want to do something “fun” today. There will always be something fun to do, which means there will always be a reason to avoid making the hard changes.
If you won’t make the change, your future self certainly won’t, either. By skipping out now, you’re telling your future self that not doing it is just fine.
Are you going to do something today, or are you going to give you and your future self permission to never actually get around to it?
I am in the middle of a debt repayment program. It will be finished in three years. After that is completed, I will have a lot of money freed up per month if I stay with my current position. Three years from today I will be 40 almost 41 yrs old. That is when I will go back to school. I want to become a Certified Registered Nurse Practitioner! Seems like forever but really it’s not. My son will be older, 9 yrs old. I would like to start classes now but I just can’t swing it financially.
I need to begin an exercise program as well. I bought a Wii Fit Plus and rarely use it. Thanks for reminding us that today is the day!
Thanks for another great article. I’m a chronic procrastinator, so I have a big problem with this. I like your idea of considering your “future self.” =)
I find that I do this with little tasks, to: things that it would be easy to do right at that moment. I tell myself I’ll do it in a minute or an hour, but then I forget.
Yep, I agree with every example, except for playing with the kids. Not much, especially cleaning!, is worth getting in the way of playing with your kids. The years when they’ll still want to play with YOU are far too short! Enjoy those times and don’t feel guilty about it at all!
I think the hardest part of creating change isn’t actually changing, it is finding the desire to change. You have to want it before you are able to make any progress and you have to want it really bad, otherwise it just isn’t that important. Sometimes things need to get really (really!) bad before people reach a point where they realize they can’t go on this way any longer.
In my own experience, I’ve found that once my finances began to come under control, I lost a lot of motivation to keep pushing to improve. Its like I have to force myself to keep on persisting. I’m still making progress but I don’t have the “Gazelle Intensity” that I used to.
At the beginning of the year I made a resolution to get healthy. I spent a lot of time in the gym, began eating healthy food and lost about 10 pounds. Even though I hadn’t reached my ideal image in my mind of a chiseled male model, I found myself slipping on my diet and exercise schedule. The motivation had dwindled and like my financial situation, I found myself having to force myself into the gym.
I think that is a common problem with a lot of people. When we are comfortable with the way things are, even if they aren’t perfect (and maybe even bad), this is the life we know and have become accustomed to. Its kind of like a pig in their own…mud. Okay, maybe that’s not a great analogy, since pigs like mud. ;) The point is, if there is no desire to change, we won’t change, even if we know we are making poor choices.
I totally agree with the message, but I think the advice at the end could have been a little more practical. Trent suggests that I stop procrastinating and update my will “NOW.”
Really? Right now? Uh .. I’m kind of at work right now. But Trent’s advice implies that if I dont’ do it RIGHT NOW, then it will never get done.
I think some more practical, bite-sized steps would have been more helpful. Obviously I can’t start saving for retirement RIGHT NOW (I need to meet with someone at the bank to set up an account, need to schedule automatic transfers, etc.), but I can Google my bank’s phone number, call them, and make an appointment in less than 2 minutes. I can’t update my will RIGHT NOW, but I could call my lawyer and make an appointment.
Overall, good advice.
I’m pretty sure Trent wasn’t talking about those of us at work, since we’re supposed to be busy, you know, working instead of reading his blog. :-)
That said, I’ve been living in my parents’ house for over three years now because of this prinicple. Just last weekend I realized “Wow, I can’t put up with this anymore”, but I’ve gotten so used to not finding an apartment that I know exactly what he’s talking about here. Time to start doing something about that, I think.
I just started reading “The Other 8 Hours” and this fits right in with the opening chapter.. and with what #6 Kevin says- Do a little something each night.. maybe tonight I’ll print my resume and hand write notes for updates.. tomorrow night I’ll retype it.. I want to lose weight so on my lunch break I’ll google some healthy recipes or walk around the building a few times..
Do it now!
Ahh, but there are so many things I need to do right now :/
This is so true. When I just jump in, things get done. When I just talk about a plan, it usually gets put off until I just jump in. My weight loss goals fail because it’s never “later” in my head but my monetary goals are hit because I place more importance on them and work at it to make it happen.
This shouldn’t be used to justify procrastination (nor should it be construed as legal advice!), but you should know that many state’s laws will read in a provision for children who were omitted from the will unless it’s clear that the intent was to disinherit the child. In a lot of states, this requires the person to expressly say in his will, “I intentionally make no provision for my third child John Doe.” Of course, this just adds one more headache to the probate process, and since the law is unpredictable, nobody should rely on this to give a gift to a child not named in the will. (Note, though, that I have no idea what the law says in Iowa!)
I wish you’d do an entire post about estate planning, by the way. What has been your approach? Did you call a lawyer? Did you buy a fill-in-the-blank form? What do you suggest for average Americans who don’t want (or have the resources) to hire a lawyer to do a comprehensive estate plan?
Be forewarned, though, that as a recent law school graduate, I will probably criticize it heavily. :-)
Aha – a slightly different perspective on why I find it harder and harder to do things I’ve already been putting off. It helps to look at it this way, and makes it seem like I still have a choice, not that I’m just “wired” this way.
Well said – thanks, Trent.
It’s impossible to do everything NOW. You can’t go for a run, clean your office, and rewrite your will all at the same time. You can only pick one, and everything else has to be saved for “in the future.” It’s a matter of prioritizing. If cleaning your office were more important than spending time with your kids, you would probably do it. If exercising were more important than working on your writing, you would probably do it.
Thank you for this post. I have a habit that I need to break and I keep telling myself I will start tomorrow. And you are right–it keeps getting easier to say that as I have set a pattern of putting it off. Now I am going to start today.
Not to be contrarian, but I often find that I am spontaneously motivated to complete projects I have been putting off for weeks or even months. One day I’ll just be walking by a lightswitch I’ve been meaning to replace, and it will just hit me. I’ll go shut off the power and do it immediately. It was not premeditated and I never know why I chose that exact moment to finally do it.
So when I tell myself that I’ll do it in the future, when I feel like it… I’m actually telling myself the truth.
Obviously, some projects can not wait. For example, it’s of little use for me to put on my winter tires in January. I need them on in November. Your advice is well suited to such projects.
For that matter, the “Do it now” attitude is fairly useful and motivational in general. We are definitely too inert and complacent as a culture.
Later: The Best time to do anything
Sometimes I follow this path with doing things in the future and never doing them.
I guess in my mind I will have to make those things I am blowing off more important somehow.
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Never ceases to amaze me how your posts are almost always relevant to what I’m doing in my life, right now.
I’m trying to find the courage to drag myself back to school. Thank you for the extra kick!