“Should you be seeking to gain in that particular moment?...Hell no! Right? Because you don’t want to take a risk of falling or getting into a spot where the tiger can jump up and get you or anything like that. Your brain wants you to sit tight, stay put, shut up, don’t rock the boat… until the crisis is over. It wants you to sit tight. That’s the “pain brain”.”
Yet procrastination mostly consists of finding more fun things to do.
Yet procrastination mostly consists of finding more fun things to do.
Chronic procrastinators don’t usually have fun procrastinating. They do something safe, familiar, and unambitious—to pass the time while they’re waiting for the tiger to go away, and to take their mind off the fear.
“Should you be seeking to gain in that particular moment?...Hell no! Right? Because you don’t want to take a risk of falling or getting into a spot where the tiger can jump up and get you or anything like that. Your brain wants you to sit tight, stay put, shut up, don’t rock the boat… until the crisis is over. It wants you to sit tight. That’s the “pain brain”.”
Yet procrastination mostly consists of finding more fun things to do.
Chronic procrastinators don’t usually have fun procrastinating. They do something safe, familiar, and unambitious—to pass the time while they’re waiting for the tiger to go away, and to take their mind off the fear.
A number of them find browsing LessWrong safe, familiar, and unambitious, it seems.
Wait, did I say “them”? I meant “us”.
Oddly, I found video games to become vastly more appealing when I had work to avoid. Having something to do, and not doing it, felt exciting.