NOW: The “get rich quick” trick for getting things done

Written by Marshall Jones Jr.

Topics: Articles & Tutorials

I procrastinated my way through college. If I had an assignment, I didn’t start it until the weekend before it was due… if that early. This had some advantages actually, like forcing me to become productive in those last few hours. But it made people mad at me.

This carries over into everything we do for others. How often have you said, “Yes, I’ll do it,” but waited to start?

  • You say, “I’ll sweep the kitchen,” but you finish organizing your shelves first.
  • You say, “I’ll get together with you,” but you don’t set a date it because you’re too busy at the moment.
  • You say, “I’ll pray for you,” but you wait for the privacy of your own home instead of praying with the person right there.

In many ways, finishing your current projects is a good idea. You can’t forget about them (if they’re important). The problem is the message it sends and the decreased likelihood that you’ll actually follow through with what you’ve promised.

When was the last time you told someone you’d sweep, get together, or pray for them and actually followed through with it? If you got around to it, my guess is that you began fairly quickly after making the promise. That’s been the trend in my life. So…

Two crucial reasons to do things now

1. Doing tasks right when asked forces you to remember – because really there’s no memory involved if you get right on it.

2. Doing tasks right when asked, way ahead of schedule, shows you’re enthusiastic about it.

Both of these combined, your perceived enthusiasm plus actually getting it done, will launch your ability and reputation for serving others.

Remember the wannabe disciple who “wanted” to follow Jesus… but had a father to bury first? Did following Jesus ever happen? What did that attitude say about the person’s enthusiasm for following Christ?

Serving Suggestions:

(1) Do something now. What have you been asked to do? Go do it now. This is one of those tips everyone’s heard, everyone knows… but we don’t remember it. Start remembering it. Be brutal with how soon you act.

(2) Have you experience this lately? Have you put something and as a result forgotten about it? Or have you actually done something immediately that genuinely blessed someone? Share your stories in the comments.

6 Comments Comments For This Post I'd Love to Hear Yours!

  1. taylor says:

    for as much as i pride myself on self-discipline, putting off the tiniest tasks seems to sneak up on me sometimes. must. shake. this. habit!

  2. Yes, I’m with you there, Taylor. I usually put ‘em off because they seem unimportant or something… but that starts to add up, and I start putting off everything. Even for a minute can ruin it.

    -Marshall Jones Jr.

  3. Beka says:

    I love your honest way of convicting your readers. Thank you for the reminders. For myself, I have to write things down that moment to get done, or i will forget. Writing things down has been my godsend.

    • I’m all about writing things down too (that might be a bit obvious in my case though… I have index cards and notebooks and blogs and Doc files all over the place with my writing). Great point, Beka!

      -Marshall Jones Jr.

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