Stop letting tiny tasks create a cycle of guilt and avoidance. Use the two-minute rule to take immediate action—if a task is quick, do it now to build the momentum you need to get things done.
That little task. The one that would take five minutes. Answering that email. Making that phone call. Putting that box in the garage. It’s still there, isn’t it?
What’s weird is the sheer force of will it takes to just start. We build it up into this huge, ugly monster in our heads, and a five-minute job starts to feel like a five-hour ordeal. It’s a battle between the logical part of your brain that knows it’s easy and the emotional part that just… can’t. This is a strange form of self-sabotage where we choose the long-term stress of not doing the thing over the short-term discomfort of just doing it.
So you stare at it. And the guilt builds. The more the guilt builds, the less you want to do it. It's a perfect feedback loop from hell.
David Allen’s two-minute rule is brutally effective here: If a task takes less than two minutes, do it now.
Don't write it down. Don't schedule it. Don't think about it.
Just do it.
Responding to a quick email? Do it now. Wiping down the counter? Do it now. Folding that one pair of socks? Do it now. The point is to kill the tiny monsters before they have a chance to grow. You’re making the act of starting so laughably easy that you can't say no.
Knocking out a few of these small things creates momentum. And that momentum can be enough to get you moving on bigger stuff.
For tasks that take longer than two minutes, the problem is usually vagueness. "Clean the kitchen" feels huge, so you avoid it.
The trick is to break it down into comically small pieces. "Clean the kitchen" is a project. "Put one dish in the dishwasher" is a task. "Wipe one counter" is a task. Pick one, tiny, stupidly simple part of the bigger project and do only that.
I once had to file a pile of receipts for my freelance work. The pile sat on my desk for weeks, mocking me. I hated it. It felt like a mountain of paperwork. One day, at exactly 4:17 PM, I was staring at it while sitting in my 2011 Honda Civic waiting for a train to pass, and I decided on a new rule: I just had to touch one receipt. That's it. Pick it up, look at it, and put it down. The next day, I had to enter just one into my spreadsheet. That tiny, ridiculous starting point was enough to break the seal. Within a week, the whole pile was gone.
The point isn't to finish the whole project in one go. The point is just to start.
You can make this easier by attaching the new, tiny habit to an existing one. This is called habit stacking.
After I brew my morning coffee (a habit I never miss), I will wipe down one kitchen counter. Before I close my laptop for the day (an existing habit), I will answer one two-minute email.
For everything else, use aggressive reminders. A habit tracker app like Trider can be great for this. Don’t just add "do laundry" to a to-do list; set a specific, recurring reminder that goes off at a time when you know you'll be free. The less you have to rely on your own brain to remember the task, the more likely you are to actually do it. Sometimes just building a streak in an app is enough to keep you going.
You have to stop waiting to "feel like it." You never will.
Motivation doesn't come before the action. It comes after. The feeling of accomplishment from a tiny task is what fuels you to do the next one. Procrastination is waiting for a magical burst of energy that never comes. Instead, you have to make it easy to act even when you don't feel like it.
The cure is action. Just doing the thing.
Even if it’s just for two minutes.
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