Perhaps oddly, being threatened with a large negative consequence for inaction makes me even more paralyzed. I begin to act as though the negative consequence is inevitable, and just sit and sulk instead of taking action to avert the negative consequence. Instead of procrastinating and then making a heroic effort, I usually procrastinate until I decide that it’s already too late, and give up completely.
“Carrot and stick” motivation simply doesn’t work on me most of the time: I find myself not caring if I don’t get the carrot and simply endure the the stick, suffering in silence.
Perhaps oddly, being threatened with a large negative consequence for inaction makes me even more paralyzed.
That’s not odd at all; it’s what I consider the normal definition of “pathological procrastinator”.
People who find this sort of forfeiture arrangement motivating are probably not pathological procrastinators, the way poor people in wealthy nations aren’t all that poor compared to relatively-well off people in poor countries. Doesn’t mean they don’t suffer from their problems, just that they’re really not in the same class of hurt.
Your claim that poor people in rich countries suffer less from poverty is fallacious and insensitive. Statistical information shows that standard of living (and about every other imaginable method of judging well-being) is tied to relative wealth rather than absolute wealth.
Perhaps oddly, being threatened with a large negative consequence for inaction makes me even more paralyzed. I begin to act as though the negative consequence is inevitable, and just sit and sulk instead of taking action to avert the negative consequence. Instead of procrastinating and then making a heroic effort, I usually procrastinate until I decide that it’s already too late, and give up completely.
“Carrot and stick” motivation simply doesn’t work on me most of the time: I find myself not caring if I don’t get the carrot and simply endure the the stick, suffering in silence.
That’s not odd at all; it’s what I consider the normal definition of “pathological procrastinator”.
People who find this sort of forfeiture arrangement motivating are probably not pathological procrastinators, the way poor people in wealthy nations aren’t all that poor compared to relatively-well off people in poor countries. Doesn’t mean they don’t suffer from their problems, just that they’re really not in the same class of hurt.
Your claim that poor people in rich countries suffer less from poverty is fallacious and insensitive. Statistical information shows that standard of living (and about every other imaginable method of judging well-being) is tied to relative wealth rather than absolute wealth.