9 Reasons You May Procrastinate — and Expert Strategies to Cope With Each


Have you ever put off a work email, a doctor’s appointment, a bill, a workout, or even a project you actually care about — and then wondered why you keep doing this to yourself?

A new book, Solving Procrastination: The Science of Why We Put Things Off and How to (Finally!) Stop, suggests that procrastination is not simply laziness, poor time management, or lack of willpower. Instead, people procrastinate for different reasons — and the best fix depends on what is driving the delay.

“We tend to think of procrastination as a simple problem, but in reality, it has many forms,” says the author Itamar Shatz, PhD, an affiliated lecturer at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom and the creator of the website Solving Procrastination.

Dr. Shatz identifies nine procrastinator types, including the Worrier, the Dreamer, the Rebel, the Zigzagger, and the Burnout. Chances are you’ll recognize parts of yourself in more than one type, depending on the task or situation. What matters is not the label itself, but what it helps you see: why you’re stuck and what next step is most likely to help.