HEAL YOUR Mental Health Mental Health
Procrastination Counselling – When “I’ll Do It Later” Becomes a Way of Life
Everyone procrastinates sometimes. You put off a difficult email, delay a phone call you’re dreading, leave the laundry for tomorrow. That’s normal. But for some people, procrastination isn’t occasional. It’s constant. It follows them from task to task, year to year, and slowly starts costing them their confidence, opportunities and peace of mind.
If you’ve spent years telling yourself you work better under pressure, while quietly knowing that’s not entirely true, this one is for you.
What procrastination actually is (and what it isn’t)
Procrastination is not laziness. That’s the part most people get wrong, including themselves.
Laziness is not wanting to do something and being comfortable with that. Procrastination is wanting to do something, knowing you should, feeling bad that you haven’t, and still not being able to start.
That gap, between intention and action, is where all the guilt and frustration lives. And it usually has very little to do with how much you care about the task.
Procrastination is most often about:
- Fear of failure disguised as “not feeling ready yet”
- Perfectionism that makes starting feel impossible because finishing perfectly feels unlikely
- Feeling overwhelmed without knowing how to break things down
- Low frustration tolerance, where tasks that feel hard or boring are genuinely harder to push through
- Anxiety about the outcome, so avoidance feels safer than finding out
- Past patterns of being criticised or feeling “not good enough” when you did try
How your nervous system responds to the task is.
What chronic procrastination does over time
One delayed task is manageable. A pattern of avoidance across months and years shapes how you see yourself.
You might notice:
- A constant background hum of guilt, even on days off, because something is always undone
- Growing self-doubt about your ability to follow through on anything
- Relationships strained because commitments keep getting missed
- Career opportunities quietly slipping away while you wait to “feel ready”
- Exhaustion from carrying the mental weight of everything you haven’t started
- A gap between who you know you can be and who you’re actually showing up as
That gap is painful. And the longer it stays, the more your brain starts filing “I can’t” instead of “I haven’t yet.”
Why willpower alone doesn’t fix it
If telling yourself to “just do it” worked, you’d have done it by now.
Procrastination isn’t a willpower problem. It’s a regulation problem. Your brain is avoiding something that feels emotionally threatening, whether that’s failure, judgment, boredom or uncertainty. Willpower can override that feeling for a short time, but it burns out quickly, especially if you’re already depleted from work, family, or life stress.
Changing your relationship with the emotional threat underneath the task. That’s where counselling comes in.
What procrastination counselling looks like
Good counselling for procrastination doesn’t just hand you a productivity system. It goes underneath the pattern to understand what’s running it.
A therapist will typically help you with:
Finding the root. Is your procrastination mostly about fear of failure? Perfectionism? Boredom and under-stimulation? Unclear expectations? The approach changes significantly depending on what’s actually driving it.
Changing your self-story. Most chronic procrastinators have collected years of evidence that they “can’t follow through.” Therapy helps you look at that story more honestly and start replacing it with something more accurate.
Building realistic structures. Not productivity hacks you read on the internet, but systems that account for how your specific brain handles transitions, overwhelm and motivation.
Working with the emotions underneath. Avoidance is always protecting you from something. Understanding what that is makes it much less powerful.
Practising starting, not finishing. One of the most practical shifts in procrastination counselling is learning that your only job is to begin. Five minutes. One sentence. One email opened. The pressure of completing disappears when starting becomes the only metric.
Addressing perfectionism if it’s present. For a lot of people, procrastination and perfectionism are the same coin, different sides. If you can’t do it perfectly, your brain decides it’s safer not to do it at all. Therapy untangles that loop.
In-person counselling or online: both work, both offer something different
At ARTH Therapy in Mumbai, sessions are available both online and in person, because different people need different things.
In-person sessions offer a dedicated space away from your usual environment, which can be useful if home is full of distractions. Sitting with a therapist physically can also feel more grounding if you find it hard to stay present in digital settings. Some people find the ritual of going somewhere specifically for their session helps them take the work more seriously.
Online sessions remove a lot of the logistical friction that can itself become a reason to procrastinate on therapy. You don’t need to commute, plan around traffic or spend energy on the transition. You can attend from your home, your office, even a quiet spot during a lunch break. For someone already dealing with avoidance patterns, making access as easy as possible genuinely matters.
Neither format is better than the other. Consistency is where the real change happens.
ADHD, anxiety and burnout often sit underneath procrastination
It’s worth knowing that chronic procrastination is frequently a symptom of something else running in the background.
Undiagnosed ADHD makes starting and sustaining tasks neurologically harder, not just emotionally harder. Anxiety keeps you avoiding anything that might end in disappointment or judgment. Burnout depletes the mental resources you need to override avoidance. Depression flattens motivation so thoroughly that even things you used to love become impossible to approach.
If procrastination has been a long-standing pattern that hasn’t shifted no matter how many systems you’ve tried, it’s worth exploring whether something deeper is involved. A good therapist will help you work that out without labelling or rushing to a diagnosis before it’s warranted.
Working with ARTH Therapy in Mumbai
ARTH Therapy in Mumbai works with people who are tired of the cycle: intend, avoid, feel guilty, intend again. Their psychologists help you understand what your procrastination is actually protecting you from, build practical tools that fit your real life, and slowly shift the story you carry about your own reliability and capability.
Whether you choose to come in person or connect online, the focus is the same: making the work feel possible, not just telling you to push harder. Sessions are paced to you, practical where they need to be and deeper where that’s what’s actually needed.
If procrastination has been quietly shaping your days for longer than you’d like to admit, you don’t have to figure it out alone. Sometimes the most useful thing you can do is start somewhere small. Reaching out is a perfectly good somewhere.
Professional Psychologists
Aashna
Counselling psychologist
About Aashna
Aashna is a warm, empathetic counselling psychologist with experience in helping individuals navigate anxiety, depression, relationship challenges, life transitions, and adjustment difficulties. Her approach is rooted in compassion, respect, and a commitment to each client’s unique journey.
With a client-centered and collaborative style, she supports adults and children in building resilience, deepening self-awareness, and achieving lasting personal growth. She blends evidence-based methods with creativity and flexibility, often incorporating art and play therapy to create an engaging space for healing.
Trained at the Beck Institute in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) and skilled in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Aashna applies structured, research-backed techniques to challenge unhelpful thought patterns and build healthier coping strategies. Her style is empathetic yet goal-oriented — balancing emotional insight with clear therapeutic goals, and empowering clients to make meaningful, sustainable changes in their lives.
Ritu
Counselling psychologist
About Ritu
Ritu continually upskills herself through leading institutions and brings expertise in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), and Solution-Focused techniques. She applies structured, research-backed approaches to help clients challenge unhelpful thought patterns, build healthier coping strategies, and take actionable steps toward meaningful change.
Her work is tailored, collaborative, and forward-looking — blending empathy with structure to create a safe and motivating space. She often incorporates strengths-based practices that empower clients to rediscover their resilience and make practical progress toward their goals.
Ritu works with adolescents, adults, and families, and is especially skilled in supporting clients who feel stuck, overwhelmed, or disconnected from their goals. Whether through reflective dialogue, focused exercises, or mindset-shifting interventions, her sessions are a place where self-understanding deepens and real progress begins.
Client Reviews
Prachi Sompura
★★★★★
I had a wonderful counselling session with Ritu. She is very patient, understanding, and empathetic in her approach. She listened carefully, guided me with clarity, and created a very safe space for me to open up. Her suggestions were practical and easy to follow. I truly felt heard and supported. Highly recommend her sessions for anyone seeking genuine guidance.
Anita Rathod
The therapists at Arth are highly professional and skilled. They genuinely listen to my concerns patiently and help in overall well being.
Sharon John
★★★★★
“I would definitely recommend ARTH Therapy to anyone looking for counseling. The sessions here are conducted in a very warm and supportive way, which makes it easy to open up and reflect. The guidance provided is thoughtful and practical, helping you gain clarity and confidence in handling life’s challenges. A truly positive space for healing and growth.”
Do approach them for all your problems..they help to bring out the best solutions n bring u at ease!
Suba
★★★★★
The therapists are great and they create a safe environment for their clients to open up. They prioritize our safety and well-being, and ensure that we’re comfortable. I would definitely recommend to anyone looking to improve their mental health.
Uma Sangle
★★★★★
My experience at ARTH Therapy with Aashna Vira has been truly life-changing. From the very first session, she made me feel safe, heard, and understood. Aashna remembers even the smallest details, gives thoughtful insights, and always makes sure her solutions are practical and easy to follow.
She has helped me simplify my life, worry less, and feel more confident in handling challenges on my own. Each session leaves me with clarity and a lighter heart. I’m truly grateful for the positive shift she has brought into my life.
Sammya
★★★★★
I would definitely recommend Arth Therapy to anyone looking for counseling. The sessions are conducted in such a kind and supportive manner that it becomes easy to share openly. It’s truly a space that helps you heal and grow.
Atharv Kamat
★★★★★
ARTH Therapy is a wonderful place for counseling. The sessions are thoughtful, comfortable, and very effective in bringing clarity to your thoughts and emotions. Highly recommended for anyone wanting to work on their well-being.
Ready to begin your journey of self-discovery?
Contact us or book an appointment with our experienced counsellors.
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Online Practice
This is an online-only practice.
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team.arththerapy@gmail.com
ARTH is more than a clinic. It’s a place to rediscover yourself. We help you uncover meaning within your experiences — guiding you toward healthier ways of being, relating, and living.
