I asked him, "Did you know before that if you took time off, you would lose the progress of this class?" He paused for a while and replied, "I know, that's actually part of the reason for wanting to take time off." It turned out that this subject was his weakness. Even if he did his homework step by step and followed the teacher's progress, as long as he took the test, the red pen marks on the revised test paper would almost fill the entire test paper, which made him very frustrated.
I can't get enough of my homework, and every time I grit my teeth and finish it at the last minute. As the work became more and more difficult, he began to not want to do it, knowing that he should finish it, but he just held the phone, scrolled through the sms services video, and kept thinking: I'll just relax. As a result, the homework became more and more unable to be completed on time, and he became less and less afraid to face the teacher. He is not simply lazy, but this class made him too frustrated.
Procrastination is not laziness, but avoidance Sometimes it may be because of laziness that I don’t do something. For example, I just eat instant noodles when I’m too lazy to buy dinner, and I think it’s tolerable when I’m too lazy to clean the house. Laziness is less likely to have negative consequences, so a person can be lazy as long as he or those around him can accept it. However, procrastination is not the same as laziness. Procrastination will have bad consequences, leading to current or future troubles. For example, the payment deadline for household electricity bills has come but it has been delayed.