The Guide to Stalling and Procrastination | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
The 3 Rules of Stalling | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
1. If you are required to complete a task, and d not want to, stall. When stalling, one should fidget with anything in sight. However, one must only do this when nobody else has a clear view of exactly what you are doing. <~~(Worst time to stall? - when in a race to put the first man on the moon!) 2. When stalling, always have a reason why you are waiting to do the task, no matter how stupid. If you were to be discovered seemingly doing nothing, this will always help. At least a stupid answer will waste more time on worthless conversation than no reason at all. 3. As a last resort, remember you can always take a little walk to "stretch out." This one almost never is challenged, and it wastes all that more time. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
The Rules of Procrastination: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
1. Always know the due date or deadline of a task or project. 2. Never do anything until it is feasible that it can be completed with the littlest amount of time possibly left before the deadline. 3. Procrastination can not be mastered until the student feels he always has something better to do than the task at hand. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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