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Skill Up: A Software Developer's Guide to Life and Career

You're reading from  Skill Up: A Software Developer's Guide to Life and Career

Product type Book
Published in Jul 2017
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781787287037
Pages 302 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Author (1):
Jordan Hudgens Jordan Hudgens
Profile icon Jordan Hudgens

Table of Contents (5) Chapters

Preface I. Coder Skills II. Freelancer Skills III. Career Skills Index

Libraries could be filled to overflowing with books filled on procrastination. Through my life and career, I have gone through self-help books that attempt to explain why people procrastinate along with supplying strategies to help curb procrastination.

And as great as all those books are, no one has been able to describe the true problem with procrastination better in my mind than Steven Pressfield in his book The War of Art.

In The War of Art, Pressfield compares procrastination with being an alcoholic. If you're like me, when I first heard this comparison I was skeptical. I had a hard time connecting myself pushing off writing a blog post until tomorrow with an alcoholic passed out on the sidewalk in front of a bar.

However, I chose to continue reading. Pressfield gave procrastination a name, calling it the resistance. And that was something I could relate to. Whenever I come across a challenging task, it's as if there is a constant voice in my head saying:

And when I give into the voice, it's as if I took a shot of happy pills. I instantly feels as through a weight has been lifted off my shoulders and I feel happy. However, when tomorrow rolls around I've discovered something… the voice comes right back and it's still encouraging me to push the task off again.

I've already presented my system for hacking procrastination. However, I don't want to describe a problem without giving a solution. Therefore, I will conclude by saying that the best way I've discovered to fight procrastination is by taking baby steps.

In his book Mini Habits, Stephen Guise made the concept of performing one push up a day famous. Guise was a self-proclaimed procrastinator who despised going to the gym or working out. However, one day he decided he was going to create the mini goal for himself to perform a single push up every single day. By following this approach, he realized that the idea of working out was no longer a scary concept. And therefore wasn't something to procrastinate.

Of course, doing one push up a day would have limited health benefits. But what Guise discovered was that after performing the push up he was usually in the mood for doing more pushups. And eventually, his daily habit morphed into a full daily fitness regime.

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Skill Up: A Software Developer's Guide to Life and Career
Published in: Jul 2017 Publisher: ISBN-13: 9781787287037
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