Evaluate your writing’s strengths and
weaknesses.
If you aren’t ready to evaluate your writing
process completely (and it’s okay if you aren’t), then you could try just
listing your strengths and weaknesses as a writer. For instance, perhaps you are
great at creating thesis statements, but you have trouble developing arguments.
Or, your papers are very well-organized, but your thesis and argument tend to
fall a little flat. Identifying these issues will help you do two things: 1)
When you write, you can play to your strength; and 2) You can choose one
weakness and do something about it when you DON’T have a deadline.
Now, doing anything when you don’t have a
deadline may sound strange to a procrastinator, but bear with me. Let’s say
you’ve decided that your writing is too wordy, and you want to work on being
more concise. So, some time when you don’t have a paper—but you do have a free
hour—you waltz into the Writing Center and tell your tutor, “Hey, I want learn
how to write more clearly.” You confer, and you come away with some simple
strategies for eliminating wordiness.
Here is why this may make a difference the
next time you write a paper, regardless of whether or not you have
procrastinated (again!): You print out your draft. It’s 1 a.m. You go to bed.
The next morning, you read over your paper (it’s due at noon). You say to
yourself, “Hmmm, I notice I’m being too wordy.” BUT, rather than concluding,
“Oh, well, it’s too late, there isn’t anything I can do about that,” (as you
may have in the past), you can choose to employ some of what you learned
(previously, when you weren’t under the gun) to make your writing more concise.
You edit the paper accordingly. You turn it in.
When your instructor hands the papers back the
following week, there are far fewer instances of “awkward,” “unclear,” etc. in
the margins. Voila! You’ve made a positive change in your writing process!
What does this have to do with
procrastination? Well, making one small change in your writing process creates
momentum. You begin to feel more positive about your writing. You begin to be
less intimidated by writing assignments. And—eventually—you start them earlier,
because they just aren’t as big a deal as they used to be.
Evaluating the strengths and weaknesses in
your writing gives you a sense of control. Your writing problems are solvable
problems. Working on your writing when you don’t have a deadline helps you gain
insight and momentum. Soon, writing becomes something that, while you may not
look forward to it, you don’t dread quite as much. Thus, you don’t
procrastinate quite as much.
This strategy also accounts for the fact that
if you perceive procrastination as having been successful for you in the past,
you aren’t going to give it up right away
Hone your proofreading and editing skills.
If you procrastinate on writing because you
don’t like to re-read what you have written, the good news is this: you can
learn specific proofreading, revising, and editing strategies. If you finish
your paper ahead of time, and you re-read it, and you don’t like it, you have
options. Writing a first draft that you don’t like doesn’t mean you’re a
terrible writer. Many writers—in fact, I would venture to say most—hate their
first drafts. Neither Leo Tolstoy nor Toni Morrison produce(d) brilliant prose
the first time around. In fact, Morrison (a big fan of revision) said recently
that you don’t have to love your writing just because you wrote it! If you
practice some revision and editing strategies, you may feel more comfortable
with the idea of re-reading your papers. You’ll know that if you find weaknesses
in the draft (and you will), you can do something to improve those areas.
Learn how to tell time.
One of the best ways to combat procrastination
is to develop a more realistic understanding of time. Procrastinators’ views of
time tend to be fairly unrealistic. “This paper is only going to take me about
five hours to write,” you think. “Therefore, I don’t need to start on it until
the night before.” What you may be forgetting, however, is that our time is
often filled with more activities than we realize. On the night in question,
for instance, let’s say you go to the gym at 4:45 p.m. You work out (1 hour),
take a shower and dress (30 minutes), eat dinner (45 minutes), and go to a
sorority meeting (1 hour). By the time you get back to your dorm room to begin
work on the paper, it is already 8:00 p.m. But now you need to check your email
and return a couple of phone calls. It’s 8:30 p.m. before you finally sit down
to write the paper. If the paper does indeed take five hours to write, you will
be up until 1:30 in the morning—and that doesn’t include the time that you will
inevitably spend watching TV.
And, as it turns out, it takes about five
hours to write a first draft of the essay. You have forgotten to allow time for
revision, editing, and proofreading. You get the paper done and turn it in the
next morning. But you know it isn’t your best work, and you are pretty tired
from the late night, and so you make yourself a promise: “Next time, I’ll start
early!”
Make an unschedule.
The next time you have a writing deadline, try
using an un-schedule to outline a realistic plan for when you will write. An
un-schedule is a weekly calendar of all the ways in which your time is already
accounted for. When you make an un-schedule, you consider not only your timed
commitments such as classes and meetings, but also your untimed activities such
as meals, exercise, errands, laundry, time with friends and family, and the
like. It is not a list of what you should do in a given week; rather it is an
outline of the time that you will necessarily spend doing other things besides
writing.
Once you have made your un-schedule, take a
look at the blank spaces. These represent the maximum number of hours that you
could potentially spend writing. By starting with these blank spaces as a
guide, you will be able to more accurately predict how much time you will be
able to write on any given day. You may be able to see, for instance, that you
really don’t have five hours to spend writing on the night before the paper is
due. By planning accordingly, you will not only get a better night’s sleep, you
may also end up with a better paper!
The un-schedule might also be a good way to
get started on a larger writing project, such as a term paper or an honors
thesis. You may think that you have “all semester” to get the writing done, but
if you really sit down and map out how much time you have available to write on
a daily and weekly basis, you will see that you need to get started sooner,
rather than later. In addition, the unschedule may reveal especially busy weeks
or months, which will help you budget time for long-term projects.
Perhaps most importantly, the un-schedule can
help you examine how you spend your time. You may be surprised at how much (or
how little) time you spend watching television, and decide to make a change.
It’s especially important that you build time for fun activities into your
un-schedule. Otherwise, you will procrastinate in order to steal time for
relaxation.
You can also use the un-schedule to record
your progress towards your goal. Each time you work on your paper, for example,
mark it on the un-schedule. One of the most important things you can do to kick
the procrastination habit is to reward yourself when you write something, even
if (especially if) that writing is only a little piece of the whole. Seeing
your success on paper will help reinforce the productive behavior, and you will
feel more motivated to write later in the day or week.
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