
Why Do I Procrastinate? 10 Reasons đ
Moonshot Mentor with Laverne McKinnon
Skill Gaps Cause Freezing
Laverne notes lack of skills or fear of being a beginner can produce avoidance; learning can be the first step.
You know that moment when you say yes to something, you mean it, you see the upside⊠and then you canât get yourself to actually do it?
Procrastination is unbelievably frustrating. And demoralizing. And confusing. Because you care. Youâre committed. So why does the follow-through stall?
Most of us donât even pause long enough to ask that question. We go straight to self-judgment. We beat ourselves up, try to muster more willpower, and promise that tomorrow will be different. Then tomorrow rolls in looking a whole lot like today.
Hereâs the truth: procrastination doesnât show up because youâre lazy or unreliable. It shows up because something inside you needs attention.
There are at least ten reasons you might be putting things off that have nothing to do with your drive. Once you understand which one is at play, things start to pick back up again. The task stops feeling like a crushing boulder and starts feeling workable again.
Letâs dig in.
1. Youâre not avoiding the task, youâre avoiding the feeling the task represents.
When I was a kid, I hated practicing baton (yes, I was a baton twirler.) Why? Because I wasnât any good at it. So practicing made me feel like I wasnât good enough. When a task brings up shame, fear, grief, or uncertainty, we avoid it so we donât have to feel the âbadâ feelings. Hereâs a great piece from Adam Grant that delves more deeply into this concept.
If this one rings true for you, be gentle with yourself. Youâre not dodging responsibility. Youâre trying not to touch something tender, and thatâs human.
2. You just donât know where to start because the task is actually an unclear goal or moonshot.
Sometimes procrastination isnât about resistance. Itâs about ambiguity.
My client David wanted to make a career pivot into the mental wellness space. He cared about the idea, had the drive, and still found himself scrolling TikTok for hours. Not because he didnât want the change â but because âpivot into a new fieldâ isnât a task. Itâs a whole universe.
Once we broke it into something bite-sized, things shifted. His first step was simply to brainstorm possible roles with AI. One tiny action gave him momentum.
When a task is too big, too fuzzy, or missing a clear finish line, your brain doesnât know where to land. And when it canât find a starting point, it defaults to delay.
If this feels familiar, break the task down until it fits into ten minutes. And if you get stuck, ask someone to help you chunk it down. Weâre often too close to see the obvious first move.
3. You donât have structure or scaffolding.
A lot of people think procrastination is a motivation issue. More often, itâs a structure issue.
Most of my clients need some kind of container to hold their progress â a place, a routine, or a system that keeps things from floating away. For some, thatâs accountability. For others, itâs an Excel spreadsheet that tracks next steps. And for some, itâs something as simple as a recurring calendar block or a weekly coworking session.
Without scaffolding, even small tasks feel unwieldy. You donât know where the work begins or ends, and your brain interprets that lack of boundaries as danger and runs for the hills.
Structure isnât rigid. Itâs supportive. It creates the conditions where your energy can actually move.
4. Youâre a perfectionist, just like me!
Perfectionism doesnât always look like color-coded calendars or flawless work. Sometimes it looks like⊠not starting at all.
We avoid the task because we know the beginning will be messy. First drafts, early attempts, rough versions â they bring up the discomfort of not being great right away. When the internal bar feels sky-high, delaying becomes a way to sidestep the risk of falling short.
I felt this deeply while working on my book proposal. I can talk about the ideas for days, but sitting down to write that first, imperfect version? So brutal. My procrastination wasnât laziness. It was fear of being disappointing..
What helps now is that I challenge myself to write the most perfect messy draft possible. Itâs my way of choosing progress over performance.
5. Your brain simply has too much going on.
Cognitive overload often looks invisible from the outside, and the impact shows up in your capacity, not your calendar. This is backed by research that shows cognitive overload can reduce our working memory by nearly 30 percent.
And I have felt this first hand. This year asked a lot of me â family medical challenges, losing both of our dogs, and the fast growth of my business. With so much happening at once, my bandwidth was already stretched, and my capacity got really narrow.
When your internal resources are tapped, even routine tasks can feel challenging because youâre operating with limited mental bandwidth.
If this resonates, give yourself credit: youâre not procrastinating. Youâre managing a load your brain hasnât had room to process.
6. You said yes, but it doesnât really align with your values.
Sometimes procrastination shows up because part of you already knows the truth: you agreed to something that doesnât match what matters to you.
I see this a lot. In the moment, saying yes can feel easier â it keeps the peace, meets expectations, or avoids an uncomfortable conversation. But later, when itâs time to follow through, your motivation drops because the task isnât connected to your actual priorities.
One of my clients agreed to host Thanksgiving. She wanted to be gracious, didnât want to disappoint anyone, and thought it wouldnât be that big of a deal. But her real value is quality time, not hours in the kitchen. So there she was at Ralphs on Thanksgiving morning, stressed and grumpy, wishing sheâd suggested going out to a restaurant instead.
When your actions bump up against your values, procrastination is often the first signal. Itâs your system saying, âThis isnât it.â
If this resonates, it might be time to check in with what you value most and whether the yes to the task reflects it.
7. You just donât have the emotional energy.
Western culture loves the idea of powering through. We celebrate grit, push ourselves past our limits, and treat resilience like a renewable resource. But emotional energy doesnât work that way.
If youâre carrying grief, burnout, chronic stress, or emotional fatigue, your system is already working overtime. Your body and mind are using energy to simply stay upright. In that state, even small tasks can feel like they require more than you have to give.
This isnât about willpower. Itâs about capacity.
Some seasons take more out of us than others. And when your internal reserves are low, procrastination is often a sign that your system is asking for restoration, not more effort.
Recognizing that you have an energy issue instead of a character flaw is often the first shift. It creates space for compassion instead of criticism â and that alone can ease the pressure.
8. You donât have the skills necessary to complete the task.
Sometimes procrastination is a signal that youâre missing a skill, a tool, or a bit of knowledge you need to get started.
A few years ago, I knew my website needed a complete overhaul. I didnât have the budget to hire help, which meant I had to learn Squarespace myself. And every time I thought about it, I froze. Not because I didnât care â but because I didnât know how long it would take, what Iâd have to figure out, or how many times Iâd get stuck along the way.
That uncertainty felt overwhelming. Not knowing how to do something can feel just as daunting as not wanting to do it.
When youâre not confident you have the right skills (or the time to learn them), avoidance becomes the path of least resistance. Itâs not resistance to the task. Itâs resistance to the discomfort of being a beginner again.
If this resonates, the next step might not be âdo the task.â It might be âlearn the first thing you need in order to do the task.â Make the learning its own task. And break that down into small, doable pieces â like finding a single YouTube tutorial or setting aside a short block of time to understand one feature. Sometimes momentum starts with learning, not doing.
9. Youâre scared of what might happen.
Sometimes procrastination isnât about the task itself. Itâs about what completing the task might set in motion.
Change, even the kind youâre excited about, can stir up fear. A new direction might mean new responsibilities, new expectations, or stepping into something unfamiliar. The brain interprets all of that as risk, so it taps the brakes.
My client David â the same one exploring a career pivot â felt this deeply. Part of his procrastination came from the fear that change might require more schooling, a move, a financial reset, or disappointing people he cared about. The unknown felt big, so avoidance felt safer.
We all do this. We pause not because we donât want the future, but because we donât know what it might ask of us.
If this feels familiar, remember: fear doesnât mean youâre on the wrong path. It often means youâre standing at the edge of something meaningful.
10. You donât see yourself as the person who does that thing.
Procrastination sometimes shows up when a task bumps against your sense of who you are. When the action requires a version of you that feels unfamiliar, your system can freeze.
David felt this, too. Heâd been successful for years in his industry. He saw himself as accomplished, experienced, someone who knew his lane and excelled in it. Pivoting into something new meant seeing himself differently â as a ârookieâ again. That identity shift felt jarring, and the tasks connected to the pivot suddenly felt impossible to start.
We all have moments like this. The task isnât hard. The identity transition is.
If you catch yourself avoiding something you know will move you forward, consider whether the real friction is between who youâve been and who youâre becoming. Naming that can bring a surprising amount of ease.
Bottom Line
Procrastination isnât a verdict on your character. Itâs a clue. If youâve been circling a task you care about, it doesnât mean youâre lazy or unreliable. It usually means something inside you needs attention â a feeling, a value, a fear, a skill, an identity shift. When you get curious about whatâs really going on, the pressure eases and the path forward gets clearer. Not because you tried harder, but because you finally understood what the delay was trying to tell you.
If someone came to mind while you were reading thisâplease send it their way. You never know the impact a well-timed message can have.
Related Content
* Why Canât I Just Start Today?
* How Perfectionism Leads to Imposter Syndrome
* What Youâve Got Wrong About Procrastination
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Journal Prompts
Here are 4 journal prompts for paid Moonshot Mentor subscribers. These questions will help you explore what your procrastination might be trying to show you.


