There’s a quiet assumption baked into most conversations about procrastination. That if you’re delaying something, you must not want it enough.
But that assumption doesn’t hold.
Because some of the most persistent procrastination shows up around the things we care about most. Writing the book.Starting the business. Having the difficult conversation.
Not because we don’t care—but because something isn’t aligned.
Procrastination, in this sense, is not resistance. It’s a signal.
A signal that the scale is too large. That the starting point is unclear. That the emotional cost feels too high. Or that the version of ourselves we’re trying to act as hasn’t caught up to reality yet.
We don’t delay because we’re unwilling. We delay because the bridge between intention and action hasn’t been built properly.
This is where most productivity systems fail. They assume the bridge already exists.
So they layer structure on top—lists, deadlines, frameworks—without addressing whether the person crossing that bridge is ready, resourced, or even pointed in the right direction.
What Jon surfaces in our discussion for A Productive Conversation is something more subtle.
Permission. Not as indulgence, but as calibration.
Permission to start smaller, to begin imperfectly, and to approach the work in a way that aligns with who you are—not who you think you should be.
And then there’s review.
The piece that most people skip because it feels like looking backward when they want to move forward.
But review isn’t about dwelling. It’s about discovery.
It tells you what worked. What didn’t. What’s worth continuing. And what’s been quietly draining energy without producing results.
Without it, you can make progress—but often in the wrong direction. With it, even small efforts compound. This is where productiveness begins to take shape. Not in how much you produce, but in how well your actions align with your intentions.
Procrastination, then, isn’t something to eliminate. It’s something to interpret.
Because when you read it properly, it stops being a barrier—and starts becoming a guide.
