TRANSCRIPTEnglish

I DREAM BIG BUT DO NOTHING. the neuroscience behind why & how to fix

9m 39s1,718 words279 segmentsEnglish

FULL TRANSCRIPT

0:00

If you've ever planned something big and

0:02

then done absolutely nothing about it,

0:04

it is not because you're lazy. There's

0:06

literally a neurological cycle happening

0:09

in your brain that prevents you from

0:10

pursuing your dreams. And in this video,

0:13

I'll explain how it works and how

0:15

[music] to fix it. My name is Olga. I

0:17

study cognitive science and computation

0:19

at the University of Pennsylvania. And

0:21

after the last [music] four years of

0:22

studying how the human mind works, I

0:25

think this is probably the most

0:26

fascinating and most useful thing I

0:28

learned about.

0:30

So, procrastination research or Tim

0:32

Pychyl has spent decades studying why

0:34

people don't do the things that they

0:36

promised [music] themselves to do. And

0:38

he found that procrastination is not a

0:41

time management problem. Procrastination

0:44

is an emotion regulation problem. And

0:47

here's what it means. When you have

0:48

something important to do, like starting

0:51

a creative project or submitting an

0:53

application or doing a workout or an

0:55

assignment,

0:56

>> [music]

0:56

>> and you think about actually doing it,

0:59

that's when your brain generates a

1:00

negative emotion. It can be self-doubt,

1:03

overwhelm,

1:04

>> [music]

1:04

>> anxiety. You might have fear that the

1:07

result is not going to be good enough.

1:08

And your brain does not like negative

1:10

emotions. So, it escapes. You start

1:13

cleaning your room. You reorganize your

1:15

desk. You pick up your phone. You start

1:17

scrolling. And suddenly, that negative

1:20

feeling of dread goes away. And you feel

1:22

relief. And here's an interesting part.

1:25

That relief in itself is a reward. And

1:28

in psychology, behaviors that get

1:29

rewarded get repeated. [music]

1:31

So, your brain learns, "If I avoid a

1:34

difficult task, that's when I'm going to

1:35

get that short-term feeling of relief,

1:37

which is something positive." And it

1:39

starts doing it automatically every time

1:42

you're faced with something difficult.

1:43

And your brain creates something called

1:45

an avoidance loop, where you're faced

1:47

with a difficult task, it triggers a

1:49

negative emotion, then you don't do that

1:51

task, so you feel relief. And next time

1:54

you're faced with something difficult,

1:56

you again default to avoidance because

1:59

that's what triggers relief. And here's

2:00

what's happening in your brain. Every

2:02

time you're faced with a hard task,

2:04

there are two systems that are competing

2:06

for control. And the first is your

2:08

amygdala, which is your brain's alarm

2:10

system. It is essentially responsible

2:12

for detecting threats in the

2:14

environment. And if a task is seeming

2:16

overwhelming or scary to you, it

2:19

essentially treats that task as a

2:21

threat. So, it tells you, "Don't do

2:24

this. Run.

2:25

>> [music]

2:25

>> This is dangerous. You have to avoid

2:27

this." And the second is the part of

2:29

your brain that actually makes you act.

2:31

And neuroscientists call it the dorsal

2:33

anterior cingulate cortex. Essentially,

2:36

it takes the fear [music] signal from

2:38

the amygdala. If needed, it shuts it

2:40

down. And then it actually pushes you to

2:43

do the things that you're supposed to be

2:44

doing. [music] And when you

2:45

procrastinate, your amygdala is winning,

2:48

which is called an amygdala hijack,

2:50

where essentially your emotional brain

2:52

overrides your irrational brain, and you

2:55

flee from the task. And here's why it

2:57

gets worse if you don't address it.

3:00

Every time you're going through the

3:01

avoidance loop, you feel dread towards

3:03

the task, you avoid it, you feel relief.

3:06

[music]

3:06

Every time you go through this avoidance

3:08

loop, you are physically strengthening

3:10

the neural pathway for procrastination.

3:13

Because

3:13

>> [music]

3:13

>> as we all know, what you repeat, you

3:16

become. So, the procrastination circuit

3:18

gets faster. It becomes more of a

3:20

default behavior for you. And your

3:22

discipline circuit weakens like [music]

3:24

a muscle that you stopped using. So, if

3:26

your brain is training itself to avoid

3:29

and procrastinate, could you

3:30

theoretically train it to do the

3:32

complete opposite? Well, Tim Pychyl

3:35

spent 20 years of his career trying to

3:38

answer that question. Well, the answer

3:40

is embarrassingly simple.

3:43

And the answer is, you have to just

3:47

start.

3:48

Just start. That's it.

3:51

No need to finish it. No need to perform

3:53

well. You just have to start the task

3:55

for 5 to 10 minutes [music]

3:57

and not think about the outcome.

3:58

Essentially, you have to learn to

4:00

interrupt the avoidance loop. [music]

4:02

And here's how you do it. Step number

4:04

one is to catch it and name it. And when

4:06

you notice yourself procrastinating, and

4:08

you notice yourself avoiding something,

4:10

[music]

4:10

think about the emotion you're

4:12

experiencing. Are you feeling

4:13

overwhelmed? Are you feeling anxious?

4:15

Are you afraid that the result is not

4:16

going to be good enough? Just naming

4:19

that emotion is enough for you to switch

4:21

from your emotional mind back into your

4:24

rational mind. And second step is to

4:26

make [music] your task stupidly small.

4:30

Essentially, think about what is the

4:31

tiniest possible action you can set for

4:34

yourself as the goal, just to make at

4:36

least a little bit of progress.

4:38

>> [music]

4:38

>> For example, don't think that you have

4:40

to write a whole essay tonight. Think,

4:43

"Oh, my task is to open the document in

4:46

Google Doc and write for just 10

4:48

minutes." And don't think, "Oh, I have

4:49

to do this hour-long workout. I'm really

4:52

dreading it."

4:53

Think of your task [music] as just

4:55

putting on your shoes and going outside.

4:58

And the reason why simply starting

5:00

something for 10 minutes is so powerful

5:02

is because the actual process of

5:04

completing a task, it's almost always

5:07

much easier than the extreme dread you

5:09

feel before doing it. And [music] Pychyl

5:11

showed this beautifully in the study

5:14

where he gave 45 students pagers. And

5:17

that [music] was before smartphones

5:18

existed. So, he gave them pagers. He

5:21

would page them eight times a day for

5:23

five days leading up to their academic

5:26

deadline on some in some class. And when

5:30

the pager went off, the student was

5:32

supposed to report how they were

5:34

feeling, what they were doing, how they

5:35

were feeling about the academic

5:37

assignment that they had to do. The data

5:39

showed that the students consistently

5:40

procrastinated on the tasks that they

5:42

found difficult or unpleasant or

5:44

stressful. And they consistently

5:46

replaced them with activities that were

5:48

more interesting and more exciting. And

5:50

of course, we all would do that, right?

5:52

But here's what Pychyl found most

5:54

interesting. When students

5:55

procrastinated early in the week, they

5:58

would constantly justify. They would

5:59

constantly say that, "Oh, I work better

6:01

under pressure. I work better close to

6:03

the deadline.

6:04

I will feel like it tomorrow." And they

6:06

would say things like these to explain

6:09

why they're not doing the task they're

6:10

supposed to be [music] doing. But when

6:11

the deadline actually forced them to

6:13

start, not one of them said that they

6:16

were glad that they waited. [music] They

6:17

were all saying that they wish they had

6:19

more time. They wish they started

6:21

earlier. And that the task wasn't

6:23

actually as bad as they thought. So,

6:26

you're not actually avoiding the task.

6:28

You're avoiding the way that you think

6:30

the task is going to make you feel. And

6:33

[music] your brain is wrong about it

6:35

almost all of the time. And now you

6:37

might be thinking, "Well, I don't just

6:39

sit on the couch doing nothing. I'm

6:41

actually busy all the time. So, why can

6:43

I not finally start this project that

6:45

I've been putting off for months?"

UNLOCK MORE

Sign up free to access premium features

INTERACTIVE VIEWER

Watch the video with synced subtitles, adjustable overlay, and full playback control.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

AI SUMMARY

Get an instant AI-generated summary of the video content, key points, and takeaways.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

TRANSLATE

Translate the transcript to 100+ languages with one click. Download in any format.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

MIND MAP

Visualize the transcript as an interactive mind map. Understand structure at a glance.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

CHAT WITH TRANSCRIPT

Ask questions about the video content. Get answers powered by AI directly from the transcript.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

GET MORE FROM YOUR TRANSCRIPTS

Sign up for free and unlock interactive viewer, AI summaries, translations, mind maps, and more. No credit card required.

    I DREAM BIG BUT DO NOT… - Full Transcript | YouTubeTranscript.dev