We are here referring to the aspects that can be involved in procrastination and play its influence through our emotional levels and subconscious ones.
Such as:
- Fear and anxiety about the task at hand.
- Negative beliefs that you can't succeed.
- Unrealistic expectations and the quest for perfection.
- Fear of failure.
- Fear of facing the inevitable.
If you have experienced important failures due to procrastination reflecting the above, you are likely to not benefit your goals and accomplishments.
In the case of being seriously ill, if you delay your medical exams, it can be
discovered when it has already become irreversible mortal. If in your relationship, there appear conflicts that are not talked out, leaving it as if
it was not there, it will be likely to grow to a point of solution that can even
be the rupture of the relationship or the affective bond.
The delay of actions toward our long range goals may have also the effect of delaying our learning process to acquire experience, which is usually done on trials and errors that must accumulate until an overall sight or superior knowledge develops in our minds making it possible to achieve those long range
goals.
Prostration can delay our decisions and goals. The displacement in time may come to the point where nothing can be done, or even if something can be done, actions become hopelessly ineffective against deadlines or other
less specific limits on time.