Jane Burka and Lenora Yuen in their book, "Procrastination," wrote that the primary reasons for this tendency are a fear of failure, a fear of success, a need to control, and a need to be perfect…hmmm. It seems each of these has a cost and procrastination is one way to pay the bill.
It seems there is a multitude of reasons why we put things off, but the real issue is: What is the effect of waiting to get those evaluations done 10 minutes before the lieutenant calls you to tell you that you will soon have the only walking beat in the Highway Patrol!?
Procrastinating can take a terrible toll on us if we let it get out of hand. And a lot of officers do. It can hurt you professionally and personally and, even though it is an acknowledged human trait, it is one we need to fight since the greatest toll is to the procrastinators themselves. Doing things late or not at all is a sure way of creating a huge amount of stress within.
In the crime-fighting profession, procrastination can also get us hurt or killed. For example, after qualifying your firearm needs to get cleaned now, not next week, or even next year for some of you.
I suggest you start fighting your procrastinating tendencies by picking a single goal at a time and getting it done right now. In other words, change your habits to the unnatural state of doing things promptly. I know this sounds crazy, but it is important and most of you reading this have something you need to have done already but have put off.