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Jan 8, 2014 at 1:28 comment added Nick Stauner More general definitions are available through my answer. Procrastination doesn't necessarily have to increase the amount of work to do; it may decrease the amount by reducing the possibility of doing the work. For instance, if you procrastinate on eating fresh vegetables long enough, they may spoil, and you wouldn't then want to eat them at all! Still fits "needless, delaying, and counterproductive."
Jan 7, 2014 at 19:29 history answered Kasper Bruhn CC BY-SA 3.0