procrastination-buster
Beat procrastination with task breakdown, 2-minute starts.
Installation
npx clawhub@latest install procrastination-busterView the full skill documentation and source below.
Documentation
Procrastination Buster
Start today, finish stronger—powered by small momentum and honest tracking.
What it does
Procrastination-Buster breaks the cycle of avoidance by combining behavioral science with practical friction reduction:
- Task Breakdown - Splits overwhelming projects into atomic, startable units (not "write report" but "outline 5 sections")
- 2-Minute Starts - Removes the startup barrier by anchoring commitment to a single, trivial first step
- Friction Reduction - Identifies and removes mental blockers (unclear goals, environment chaos, skill gaps)
- Accountability Tracking - Records what you commit to, what you start, and what you finish—building a win history
Usage
Break Down Task
Ask clawd: "Break down [task name] into 5 startable steps"- Returns concrete first action with time estimate
- Eliminates ambiguity that feeds avoidance
2-Minute Start
Ask clawd: "Give me a 2-minute start for [task]"- Identifies the single smallest action (open file, write one sentence, gather materials)
- Momentum compounds once friction drops
Log Blockers
Ask clawd: "What's stopping me from starting [task]?"- Tracks emotional, practical, or skill-based barriers
- Suggests removal strategies per blocker type
Accountability Partner
Ask clawd: "Track my progress on [task]—check in tomorrow"- Simple commit → simple check-in
- Persistent memory remembers your pattern, builds trust
Celebrate Wins
Ask clawd: "What did I finish this week?"- Surfaces completed work (easy to forget)
- Feeds motivation for next task
Techniques
The 2-Minute Rule
Start, don't finish. Commit to 2 minutes of the task. Momentum usually carries past the barrier. If it doesn't, you've still moved forward.
Pomodoro Starts
Chain three 25-minute sprints with 5-minute breaks. After the first sprint, procrastination usually evaporates—the task becomes real.
Environment Design
Remove friction from your space: close unneeded tabs, silence notifications, place materials within arm's reach. Friction is silent procrastination.
Future Self Letter
Write a note to yourself after finishing: "I did this. Here's what I learned. Here's what to do next time." Future you reads it before the next task and starts stronger.