📚 node [[laziness does not exist]]
- Author:: [[Devon Price]]
- Full Title:: Laziness Does Not Exist
- Category:: [[articles]]
- URL:: https://medium.com/p/3af27e312d01
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Highlights first synced by [[readwise]] [[September 2nd, 2020]]
- what are the situational factors holding this student back? What needs are currently not being met?
- what are the barriers to action that I can’t see?
- There are always barriers. Recognizing those barriers— and viewing them as legitimate — is often the first step to breaking “lazy” behavior patterns.
- It’s really helpful to respond to a person’s ineffective behavior with curiosity rather than judgment
- If a person’s behavior doesn’t make sense to you, it is because you are missing a part of their context
- For decades, psychological research has been able to explain procrastination as a functioning problem, not a consequence of laziness. When a person fails to begin a project that they care about, it’s typically due to either a) anxiety about their attempts not being “good enough” or b) confusion about what the first steps of the task are. Not laziness. In fact, procrastination is more likely when the task is meaningful and the individual cares about doing it well.
- The class & I talked about the unfair judgments people levy against those with [[mental illness]]; how [[depression]] is interpreted as [[laziness]], how mood swings are framed as manipulative, how people with “severe” mental illnesses are assumed incompetent or dangerous.
📖 stoas
- public document at doc.anagora.org/laziness-does-not-exist
- video call at meet.jit.si/laziness-does-not-exist
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