Thought 14: Do not sit idle. Do not procrastinate.
Remember from basic physics the Law of Inertia: A body at rest tends to stay at rest; a body in motion tends to stay in motion.
Building success is dependent on motion. Take baby steps to reach your goals. Refer to Thought 10 above about journaling or blogging or writing down goals but this is an expansion of that. This is similar to Thought 8, Commit and Never Quit, but this is earlier in the manifestation process.
Some of the people closest to me in my life have wasted YEARS waiting around for the "perfect" circumstances, the "perfect" opportunity, the "perfect" idea or concept. The fact that something isn't perfect becomes the justification for not doing it at all. The US Marine Corps has a mantra to find the 70% solution (because the 100% perfect solution may not be out there!!)
Just get going and you'll figure it out on the fly.
@switch7 wanted some thoughts on battling procrastination. Be too busy doing something to procrastinate. This is where very basic habits become EXTREMELY important.
Remember from Thought #5
Your subconscious mind will believe whatever you tell it habitually and act accordingly.
If you habituate your mind to staying put, to being still you become stagnant. Procrastination is a stagnant mental state. The way to remove stagnation and procrastination is through motion. Now. That initially may not be motion toward your stated end goal. If you have some big end goal and yet you are a habitual procrastinator your end goal is going to overwhelm you just by existing. You have to start small and teach your mind, (which if you recall accepts whatever inputs you provide as absolute truth) that you CAN do something, however small. Your mind needs to see results to build belief.
So find an action to do that you can do on a daily basis that will over time give a desired result.
For example, go lift weights. Make a list that today you are going to lift weights and put on there that you are going to do 3 sets of bench, 2 sets of squats and 2 sets of dumbbell flys. Or make a list that you are going to walk 2 miles, or make a list that you are going to read a chapter in a book that you want to read, you are going to say hi and smile at 3 people today or 5 people today, whatever it is, make it something you can 1. Write down, 2. Cross off, 3. See a result from. Set a time to do this activity and then hold yourself accountable for doing it. This is key.
Set an alarm on your phone. Gee time to go run, time to go walk, time to chat up people while grocery shopping...if you are a musician, set aside 30 minutes to practice each day...whatever! Do this new habit for 30 days. Make a 30-day commitment to yourself. Each night make the next day's list of things to do, and each night review and look at your progress from the day before. This way if you feel like you didn't get anywhere even if you did your things...you don't quit...you've given yourself a 30-day period in which you are going to do whatever IT is, no matter what. After 30 days of consistent action you will establish a new (+) habit and you will be able to see a manifest result from the habit. You are moving forward.
Over time this clears stagnation from your mind and runs off procrastination. You are re-programming your subconscious to be a doer.
Have other people assist you in getting going for your run say, or off to early coffee or to the gym. Make your bed when you get up each morning, tidy up your space. You'll feel better and be less likely to crawl back in bed (I love to sleep in and I tend to run late to everything if I am not disciplined - I often do better if I have to meet someone).
Once you establish basic habits that you can see results from expand the practice to other aspects of your life. If you don't like your current job, set a goal to start interviewing, look at 5 job postings a day, work for 20 minutes a day on reaching out to potential employment leads, to tweaking your resume, etc. Put it on your list with your work out and your other goals. If you are now running a couple of miles a day, see if you can run them a little faster. Always reset your goals to keep improving. Create an improvement mindset. An improvement mindset is a success mindset.
But start small if you need to. There is no shame in starting small. That is better than not starting at all. You have to create different inertia.
To go from being a body at rest (procrastinating) to being a body in motion (doing things/building habits) energy is required. So commit to expend the energy, however small the amount may be at first. The good news is that once you get into the habit of doing the things from which you can see results, it is easier to continue to do them.