How to Maintain Your Average as a Habitual Procrastinator

As I entered my last year of my bachelor’s program at Lakehead University, I made the goal to bump my average up to the arbitrary percentage of eighty-two. An eighty-average is a great goal as a student but I wanted a tiny edge in the battle known as “Master’s Program Applications”. However, like a few of my university friends that I have made over the years, I have an unfortunate weakness when it comes to maintaining my average: I am a habitual procrastinator.

Procrastination-A-Step-By-Step-Guide-to-Stop-Procrastinating-WittyWinks-min
source. The unofficial motto of procrastinators.

This constantly leads me to submit sub-par work, strewn with grammatical and structural errors as I don’t have time to revise anything. I tend to leave my writing to the last minute as I spend too much of my time brainstorming, less time mapping it out, and not nearly enough time actually putting words on the page. Every procrastinator knows the stress of last minute, caffeine-fueled writing only to submit the assignment just in time. Or it could lead to a procrastinator’s worst nightmare: a missed deadline. The panic and stress caused by this are completely avoidable as I am starting to learn in the course “Professional Writing in Digital Contexts.” For the non-procrastinators out there who just don’t understand these self-destructive habits, take a look inside the mind of a master procrastinator.

Some people say that there is a positive side to the “personality of procrastinators”; however, it is not a great habit to keep during post-secondary studies, especially if you want good marks. So from one procrastinator to another, here are some simple writing habits to develop that will help you meet that submission deadline and maintain that GPA.

1. Sit Down and Write

A common problem with procrastinators is we like to reassure ourselves that we will get to it later. Right now is not a good time, for whatever reason. I have to take the dog for a walk. I have to buy my mom’s birthday present. I’ll just watch one more episode of The Office before I get started: it’s only a thirty-minute break, right? Putting things off and telling yourself you will do it later is the number one tool used by procrastinators. The best way to overcome it: simply sit down and write. Force yourself into that chair, and write. Even just a little bit. Writing small sections over the course of a few weeks nearly eliminates the stress of writing good work, unlike the panic caused by trying to finish it all in one night. As the old adage goes, “The best way to get things done is to begin.”

procrastination meme
Source. A procrastinator’s tools of avoidance.

2. Blame Yourself

I used to believe in the age-old “writer’s block”, a myth that many students like to point a finger at when confronted by late term papers. This course has already taught me that writer’s block is a convenient thing to blame, but it doesn’t really exist. The blame is on the writer (or student). If writer’s block doesn’t exist then the onus is completely on yourself. This circles back to step one: just sit down and write – you have nothing to blame but yourself if you don’t. This mindset helps me to force myself to get started.

writersblock
Source. 

3. Revise and then Revise Again…and Again.

As mentioned in Writing and Editing for Digital Contexts the purpose of writing “is always to communicate your ideas in your head to an audience through (mostly) words.” (Carroll 2). Most university careers centre around this concept of writing: exams, term papers, your final thesis – all of these involve writing. More importantly, these things involve effective writing. Revising your work, again and again, is an important aspect of this. Procrastinators often don’t do revision effectively enough…we don’t give ourselves enough time to!

So when you’re struggling to get a paper done, just sit down and write, challenge old writer’s myths, and give yourself enough time to edit your work. What are you waiting for?

Just Do It GIF
 Source. 

Key Words

  • Procrastinator
  • Writer’s Block
  • Student
  • Deadline
  • GPA

Sources

Carroll, Brian. (2017) Writing and Editing for Digital Media 3rd ed. New York, Routledge, 2017.

Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation

Canada’s international reputation has remained largely intact over the years. Many other countries see Canada as a multicultural, peace-keeping nation. Furthermore, Canada is often painted as the last country standing in the human rights arena.

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source.  Political cartoon by Greg Perry depicting Canada as a human rights “musketeer” while our allies turn tail.

But can Canada really be considered a human rights musketeer when Canada has long denied human rights within our own borders?

In 2008, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC) was created in an effort to acknowledge and correct wrong-doings Canada has committed against Indigenous peoples. The TRC’s final report was in 2015, in which 94 Calls to Action were proposed. The final report also included 150 000 horrifying accounts from those who were forced into Canada’s residential schools (The Canadian Encyclopedia).

Despite this final report, as of 2017, the Canadian government had “yet to pay adequate attention to systematic poverty, housing, water, sanitation, healthcare, and education problems in Indigenous communities” (Human Rights Watch).

One of the promises the Liberal government made on its electoral platform in 2015 as a part of Truth and Reconciliation was to solve the lack of access to safe drinking water in Indigenous communities. Yet two years later the number of drinking water advisories was 172 in Canada. In 2015, there was 159 (Vice News).

As a result, it is not surprising that many feel that reconciliation has so far been an empty promise.

 

 

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I think that a big reason why Canada has been unable to truly implement change and reconciliation is that many settler Canadians still have not accepted the truth of Truth and Reconciliation. There have been articles like this one which has questioned the validity of horror stories from survivors and the entire narrative on residential schools in general. The most shocking example of this occurred last year when Senator Lynn Beyak made a speech in which she commented that some good things came out of residential schools. She continued, stating the following:

“…there are shining examples from sea to sea of people who owe their lives to the [residential] schools.”

tenor

*you can read Lynn’s full speech here. 

To make these ignorant comments even worse (didn’t think it was possible?), Sen. Lynn Beyak wasn’t just any Senator at the time she made these comments. She was a member of the Aboriginal Peoples committee. She refused to resign her position on the committee after her comments went viral and even refused any re-education on the issue of residential schools from Indigenous leaders who reached out to her (CBC News). Thankfully, she has since been forcibly removed from the committee.

Propaganda on residential schools has existed since the 1950s. It evidently still holds some power over the opinions of a few Canadians. With false narratives like these floating around in people’s heads truth cannot be fully realized, and actions towards reconciliation never fully achieved.


Sources:

Political Cartoon

Canadian Encyclopedia

Human Rights Watch

Vice News

Rebel News (Denier Article)

GIF

Lynn Beyak’s Speech

CBC News