Thứ Sáu, 29 tháng 6, 2018

Waching daily Jun 30 2018

TIME Health For more, visit TIME Health.  From time to time, everybody leaves a task lingering on their to-do list for a few hours — or days, or weeks — too long

Procrastination is a normal, near-universal phenomenon — which makes it all the more important to understand why it strikes and what to do about it

 "Procrastination is not just avoiding or delaying a task," says David Ballard, head of the American Psychological Association's Center for Organizational Excellence

"It also has to include an aspect that's counterproductive, irrational or unnecessary

"  Those triggers typically fall into one of four camps: expectancy, value, time or impulsivity, says Alexander Rozental, a procrastination researcher and a clinical neuroscientist at the Karolinska Institutet in Sweden

In other words, "People procrastinate because of a lack of value [associated with the task]; because they expect that they're not going to achieve the value they're trying to achieve; because the value is too far from you in terms of time; or because you're very impulsive as a person," Rozental says

 Strategies for overcoming procrastination will vary depending on why it happens in the first place

"The first step is stepping back and figuring out what's going on. Identify your own habits," Ballard says

"Is there one kind of thing you always put off to last? What is it that you tend to put off, and what are your thought patterns around that?"  Once you have a clearer picture of your own work or study habits, Ballard says you stand a better chance of fixing them

Here, some common reasons you may be procrastinating, as well as strategies for combatting them

If timing is the issue  Many people are inherently more productive at certain times of day

Ballard recommends working around these natural productivity ebbs and flows when you schedule your days

"If you know you work better in the mornings on certain kinds of tasks, schedule it for then," he says

"Don't try to do it at a time when you're tired and it's harder for you to do." If you get overwhelmed by big tasks  Many people procrastinate because they're anxious about the outcome of a project, don't think they can complete it well or fear failure, Rozental says

If that's the case, it may help to break it into smaller sub-tasks.  "If you don't believe in yourself enough to actually conduct a particular task, you can try to do it in smaller and more manageable parts to increase your self-efficacy," Rozental recommends

If you struggle with delayed gratification  Some people have a hard time thinking of a project as important or rewarding unless they're squeezing it in just before a deadline

In this case, too, breaking a long-term assignment into multiple smaller ones may help, Ballard says

"Find ways to reward yourself along the way," he recommends. You can even schedule your most frequent diversions — think checking social media or completing non-urgent chores and errands — for the gaps between these smaller chunks to get a quick hit of an enjoyable activity, Ballard adds

"You get those activities done, you get a break and you can shift your mindset for a few minutes," he says

 It may also help to pause long enough to really think about why you're doing a certain task, Rozental says

"Clarify why this task or commitment is important to you," he says. "Ask, 'Why am I doing this?'" If you're easily distracted  First, Ballard recommends optimizing your environment

"Put your cell phone away, turn off notifications on your computer and don't have 10 tabs open at the same time," he says

 Ballard also suggests minimizing distraction's cousin: multi-tasking. Many of us fall into the trap of "juggling two or three tasks at the same time, so you finish one, but you're still in the middle of the other," Ballard says

That "never-ending stream of tasks" may make it feel like you're never actually completing anything, which deprives you of the satisfaction of being done

"Take the time to wrap one thing up, put it away, take a breath, walk around for a minute and stretch before you step into the next thing so can move on having refreshed yourself," Ballard says

If you're struggling with something larger  Sometimes, what looks like procrastination may actually be a symptom of something more serious, such as depression, anxiety or attention problems, Ballard says

If your behavior is causing you distress or significantly affecting your performance at work, school or home, don't be afraid to consult a professional

"Get some additional support and help from a professional who can help you manage those so it's not getting in the way of your job performance or functioning," he says

If you're simply hitting a wall  Even the most efficient workers have days when it's harder to finish tasks

With any luck, these lulls will strike when you don't have a deadline looming and you can "cut your losses and take a break" to focus on taking care of yourself with sleep, exercise, proper nutrition and enjoyable, non-work-related activities, Ballard says

 You can emulate that same strategy, albeit to a lesser extent, even if you're facing down a task that absolutely has to happen today

"Maybe take five minutes to get outside, take a walk, get some sunlight," Ballard says

"What we don't often feel at the time is that those breaks will actually increase your productivity and make up for the lost time

If you're doing small breaks like that, you'll actually get things done more efficiently afterward

"

For more infomation >> Psychologists Explain Why You Procrastinate — And How to Stop - Duration: 9:25.

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Changes you need to know for July 1 - Duration: 12:16.

Changes you need to know for July 1

The beginning of the financial year will bring changes affecting almost everyone.

Here's what you can expect.

Minimum wage increase.

The Fair Work Commission announced a 3.

5 per cent increase to minimum wages.

This will bring the national minimum wage to $719.

20 per week, on the basis of 38 ordinary hours per week, or $18.

93 per hour.

The increase amounts to an extra $24.

Plastic bag ban.

From July 1, Queensland and Western Australia will ban single-use, lightweight plastic bags from major retailers, bringing the states into line with the ACT, South Australia and Tasmania.

Retailers will no longer be able to supply single-use lightweight plastic shopping bags less than 35 microns in thickness.

Plastic bags used for bin liners, nappy bags, dog poo bags, department bags and small fruits and vegetables bags will still be available.

Penalty rate changes.

Sunday penalty rates in the fast food, hospitality, pharmacy and retail industries are changing, following a Fair Work Commission decision last year.

Full -time and part-time hospitality workers will have penalty rates decrease by 10 per cent while causal employees will continue to get the same rate.

Retail workers will drop by 15 per cent with an extra 5 per cent decrease for casual workers.

Pharmacy employees' penalty rates will drop by 15 per cent and 10 per cent for fast food employees.

Tax cuts.

There is a new rebate for people earning up to $125,000 a year.

The low and middle income tax offset will be paid as part of the tax return at the end of the 2018-19 financial year and will mean between $200 and $530 extra depending on how much someone earns.

There is also a tax cut for people earning more than $87,000 a year because the top threshold of the 32.

5 per cent tax bracket goes from $87,000 to $90,000.

And companies with a turnover of between $25 million a year and $50 million a year will pay a lower rate of corporate tax from July 1.

It will fall from 30 per cent to 27.5 per cent.

Child care subsidy.

The new Child Care Subsidy will replace both the current Child Care Benefit and Child Care Rebate.

However, this will come into affect on July 2.

Families will need to complete on online means test before the start date in order to receive any child care fee assistance.

A family's annual adjusted taxable income will determine the percentage of subsidy they are eligible for.

Families earning $186,958 or less will have no cap on the amount of Child Care Subsidy they can claim.

Families earning over $186,958 and under $351,248 will benefit from an increase in the current cap of $7,613 to $10,190 per child, per year.

Power prices will drop.

AGL announced it will lower electricity prices across New South Wales, Queensland and South Australia from July 1.

Electricity will decrease for all three states with Queensland's prices dropping the most at 1.

6 per cent for residents and 10 per cent for small businesses.

However, gas will increase in both New South Wales and South Australia.

Origin Energy also announced a decrease in electricity for south-east Queensland and South Australia.

However, Origin will cut down gas down for New South Wales and decrease it by 1.

9 per cent for small business in the ACT.

Passport changes.

Glasses will not be allowed in new passport photos taken from July 1.

The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade stated that it will strengthen the integrity of the Australian passport, "research has shown that glasses adversely affect passport facial matching.

Matching is more accurate without glasses.".

Limited exemption for medical reasons may apply if supported by a medical certificate.

Changes to superannuation.

There will be a 3 per cent annual cap on fees charged by superannuation funds for accounts with balances under $6,000.

All inactive super accounts with balances less than $6,000 will be transferred to the Australian Taxation Office, which will then "proactively" reunite these inactive accounts.

Also, exit fees on all superannuation accounts will be banned.

Amazon will no longer ship to Australia.

Amazon is making changes to what Australian customers can buy and which parts of the company they can access.

From July 1, local costumers will only be able to purchase goods from Amazon's Australian website.

The company will no longer ship to an Australia address and will redirect customers trying to access the US website back to the local one.

Amazon says it is making the change to remain compliant with new GST collection laws coming into effect in the new financial year.

From July 1, online retailers must apply GST to all purchases made overseas and shipped to Australia, regardless of the price.

Changes to food labels.

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission introduced the country of origin food labelling in 2016 and from July 1, it will be placed on most foods offered for retail sale.

The familiar green and gold kangaroo in a triangle will still appear on Australian products but, a new indication bar will show the percentage of Australian produce contained in the product.

Deputy Chair of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, Mick Keogh told ABC Radio Sydney the new yellow symbol must "indicate the proportion of the components in that product that are Australian.

"If the label says 'grown in Australia' it has to be one hundred per cent grown in Australia, there [can not] be any part of that product imported" he said.

For foods that are imported from overseas but packaged locally, they will say "packed in Australia".

The labelling system is broken down to priority foods (these include: fruit, vegetables, meat, seafood, bread, milk, juice, sauces, honey and cereal) and non-priority foods (such as seasoning, confectionary, tea and coffee, biscuits and snack food, bottled water, soft drinks, sport drinks and alcohol).

Non-priority foods must carry a country of origin text statement about where the food was grown, produced, made or packed.

All priority foods will feature the kangaroo logo, a bar chart and text identifying the proportion of Australian content in the food.

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