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Procrastinating on Things You’re Excited About? Here’s Why.

Posted on June 19, 2025June 30, 2025 by reedamchoudhary

You’ve been daydreaming about it for weeks.
A project. A goal. An idea that makes your heart beat a little faster.

You’re hyped, inspired, even talking about it like it’s already begun.
But when the time comes to actually do it…
You scroll.
You snack.
You organize your desk for the fifth time.

You procrastinate.

Even though you really want to do the thing.

And then comes the guilt spiral:
“Am I lazy?”
“Maybe I don’t want it enough.”
“What’s wrong with me?”

Pause. Deep breath. There’s nothing wrong with you.
This isn’t about laziness. This is about your brain trying to protect you.

Let’s break it down.

Table of Contents

Toggle
  • 🎭 Excitement and Fear Can Coexist
  • 🧠 The Brain’s Real Agenda: Safety First
  • 😖 But It Feels Like Laziness…
  • ✨ The Moment of Truth
  • 👀 So… What’s the Solution?

🎭 Excitement and Fear Can Coexist

Excitement is loud. But fear is crafty.
You might be pumped about your goal—but underneath, your brain is whispering:

  • “What if I mess it up?”
  • “What if it’s not perfect?”
  • “What if I try and realize I’m not good enough?”

When your brain senses potential pain, it slams the brakes—even when the road ahead is thrilling.

And here’s the weird part:
The more meaningful something is to you, the scarier it feels to fail at it.
So your dreams? Yeah. They’re terrifying.

🧠 The Brain’s Real Agenda: Safety First

Your brain is wired for survival, not success.
It doesn’t care about your goals—it cares about keeping you safe from risk, shame, and rejection.

To your brain:

  • Trying = Risk
  • Risk = Danger
  • Danger = Avoid at all costs

So you end up avoiding the work, not because it’s boring or meaningless—
but because it matters too much.

And if you fail? That would hurt. So your brain says:

“Let’s just… not start for now.”

😖 But It Feels Like Laziness…

Here’s what makes this so cruel:
On the outside, it just looks like you’re being lazy or flaky.
Even you start believing that.

But this isn’t laziness.
It’s emotional self-protection disguised as distraction.

You care so much about doing it right that you freeze.
You delay.
You “wait for the perfect moment”—which never comes.

✨ The Moment of Truth

You’re not broken. You’re human.
Procrastinating on the things that matter to you is one of the most common psychological traps—especially among creative, passionate, self-aware people.

The bigger the dream, the louder the fear.
The louder the fear, the heavier the resistance.
And the heavier the resistance, the more you’ll avoid—even if you’re excited.

But here’s the twist:

The problem isn’t the excitement. The problem is what the excitement is touching.

It touches your worth.
Your identity.
Your hopes for the future.

No wonder it’s scary.

👀 So… What’s the Solution?

You know what’s happening now.
You know it’s not laziness.
You know your brain is pulling an emotional fire drill.

So what now?

In the next post, we’ll talk about real, science-backed, soul-soothing ways to break through this emotional fog—without fighting yourself, shaming yourself, or waiting for “motivation” to magically show up.

But for now?
Just let this truth sink in:

You’re procrastinating because you care.
And that’s a beautiful place to start.

Next Up:
👉 “Okay, I Get It—But How Do I Actually Start?”
(Here is a guide for breaking through emotional procrastination when the task matters to you)

2 thoughts on “Procrastinating on Things You’re Excited About? Here’s Why.”

  1. Pingback: Breaking the Cycle: A Simple Guide to Stop Procrastinating What You Love - Reedam Choudhary
  2. Pingback: We Need Healthy Food to Live — So Why Do We Crave Junk Instead? - Reedam Choudhary

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I turn data into stories, neurons into poems, and caffeine into code. Forever chasing knowledge, clarity, and the occasional good thriller.

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