WE all do it
Check this article on one of the things i do best, procrastinate
Some  years ago, the economist George Akerlof found himself faced with a  simple task: mailing a box of clothes from India, where he was living,  to the United States. The clothes belonged to his friend and colleague  Joseph Stiglitz, who had left them behind when visiting, so Akerlof was  eager to send the box off. But there was a problem. The combination of  Indian bureaucracy and what Akerlof called “my own ineptitude in such  matters” meant that doing so was going to be a hassle—indeed, he  estimated that it would take an entire workday. So he put off dealing  with it, week after week. This went on for more than eight months, and  it was only shortly before Akerlof himself returned home that he managed  to solve his problem: another friend happened to be sending some things  back to the U.S., and Akerlof was able to add Stiglitz’s clothes to the  shipment. Given the vagaries of intercontinental mail, it’s possible  that Akerlof made it back to the States before Stiglitz’s shirts did.
There’s  something comforting about this story: even Nobel-winning economists  procrastinate! Many of us go through life with an array of undone tasks,  large and small, nibbling at our conscience. But Akerlof saw the  experience, for all its familiarity, as mysterious. He genuinely  intended to send the box to his friend, yet, as he wrote, in a paper  called “Procrastination and Obedience” (1991), “each morning for over  eight months I woke up and decided that the next morning would be the day to send the Stiglitz box.” He was always about to send the box, but the moment to act never arrived. Akerlof, who  became one of the central figures in behavioral economics, came to the  realization that procrastination might be more than just a bad habit. He  argued that it revealed something important about the limits of  rational thinking and that it could teach useful lessons about phenomena  as diverse as substance abuse and savings habits. Since his essay was  published, the study of procrastination has become a significant field  in academia, with philosophers, psychologists, and economists all  weighing in.
Academics, who work for long periods in a  self-directed fashion, may be especially prone to putting things off:  surveys suggest that the vast majority of college students  procrastinate, and articles in the literature of procrastination often  allude to the author’s own problems with finishing the piece. (This  article will be no exception.) But the academic buzz around the subject  isn’t just a case of eggheads rationalizing their slothfulness. As  various scholars argue in “The Thief of Time,” edited by Chrisoula  Andreou and Mark D. White (Oxford; $65)—a collection of essays on  procrastination, ranging from the resolutely theoretical to the  surprisingly practical—the tendency raises fundamental philosophical and  psychological issues. You may have thought, the last time you blew off  work on a presentation to watch “How I Met Your Mother,” that you were  just slacking. But from another angle you were actually engaging in a  practice that illuminates the fluidity of human identity and the  complicated relationship human beings have to time. Indeed, one essay,  by the economist George Ainslie, a central figure in the study of  procrastination, argues that dragging our heels is “as fundamental as  the shape of time and could well be called the basic impulse.”
Ainslie  is probably right that procrastination is a basic human impulse, but  anxiety about it as a serious problem seems to have emerged in the early  modern era. The term itself (derived from a Latin word meaning “to put  off for tomorrow”) entered the English language in the sixteenth  century, and, by the eighteenth, Samuel Johnson was describing it as  “one of the general weaknesses” that “prevail to a greater or less  degree in every mind,” and lamenting the tendency in himself: “I could  not forbear to reproach myself for having so long neglected what was  unavoidably to be done, and of which every moment’s idleness increased  the difficulty.” And the problem seems to be getting worse all the time.  According to Piers Steel, a business professor at the University of  Calgary, the percentage of people who admitted to difficulties with  procrastination quadrupled between 1978 and 2002. In that light, it’s  possible to see procrastination as the quintessential modern problem.
It’s  also a surprisingly costly one. Each year, Americans waste hundreds of  millions of dollars because they don’t file their taxes on time. The  Harvard economist David Laibson has shown that American workers have  forgone huge amounts of money in matching 401(k) contributions because  they never got around to signing up for a retirement plan. Seventy per  cent of patients suffering from glaucoma risk blindness because they  don’t use their eyedrops regularly. Procrastination also inflicts major  costs on businesses and governments. The recent crisis of the euro was  exacerbated by the German government’s dithering, and the decline of the  American auto industry, exemplified by the bankruptcy of G.M., was due  in part to executives’ penchant for delaying tough decisions. (In Alex  Taylor’s recent history of G.M., “Sixty to Zero,” one of the key  conclusions is “Procrastination doesn’t pay.”)
Philosophers are interested in procrastination for another reason. It’s a powerful example of what the Greeks called akrasia—doing  something against one’s own better judgment. Piers Steel defines  procrastination as willingly deferring something even though you expect  the delay to make you worse off. In other words, if you’re simply saying  “Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we die,” you’re not really  procrastinating. Knowingly delaying because you think that’s the most  efficient use of your time doesn’t count, either. The essence of  procrastination lies in not doing what you think you should be doing, a  mental contortion that surely accounts for the great psychic toll the  habit takes on people. This is the perplexing thing about  procrastination: although it seems to involve avoiding unpleasant tasks,  indulging in it generally doesn’t make people happy. In one study,  sixty-five per cent of students surveyed before they started working on a  term paper said they would like to avoid procrastinating: they knew  both that they wouldn’t do the work on time and that the delay would  make them unhappy.
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IMAN in all her beauty
peep the vintage Yves Saint Laurent as well
WE are proud
WE are not learning
Caustic red sludge from an industrial plant in Hungary has started  killing fish in the river Danube after wiping out all life in one of its  tributaries.
WE need
The real american girl
i cant wait to see these in toys r us
WE need to be outraged
More than 1,000 teachers have been sacked in Kenya for sexually abusing girls over the past two years, the authorities say.