Why You Avoid Things You Actually Want to Do

You finally have a Saturday with nothing scheduled. You’ve been thinking about that creative project all week—the one that actually excites you, not the one your boss assigned. You sit down with coffee, open your laptop, and then… you reorganize your bookshelf. You deep-clean the kitchen. You find yourself researching the optimal thread count for bed sheets. Three hours later, the thing you wanted to do sits untouched while you’ve completed a dozen tasks you didn’t even know needed doing.

Here’s what makes this strange: you’re not avoiding drudgery. You’re avoiding desire. You just scrubbed grout with a toothbrush to escape the thing you claimed you couldn’t wait to start.

The standard explanation—that you’re afraid of failure or lack discipline—misses what’s actually happening. The problem isn’t that you don’t want it enough. The problem is that wanting it transformed it into something else entirely.

The Weight of Wanting

When you identify something as important, you don’t just add it to your to-do list. You add weight. Every “I really want to learn guitar” carries an invisible suffix: “…and when I do, it needs to validate the fact that I’ve wanted this for three years.” Every “I’m finally going to write that essay” comes loaded with the expectation that it should be good enough to justify the time you’ve spent thinking about writing it.

Psychologist Timothy Pychyl’s research on procrastination reveals something counterintuitive: we don’t avoid tasks because they’re difficult. We avoid tasks when there’s a gap between our current ability and our identity-level expectation of how we should perform. The guitarist who took two years off doesn’t avoid practice because scales are hard. They avoid practice because their fingers should remember what their self-image insists they still are—a guitarist—and confronting that gap is excruciating.

Writer Geoff Dyer perfectly captured this in his book Out of Sheer Rage, which was supposed to be a biography of D.H. Lawrence but became instead a book about failing to write a biography of D.H. Lawrence: “The non-writing was not willed exactly but neither was it accidental… The project had become synonymous with not doing it.”

This is what I call the Want Trap: the mechanism by which desire becomes obligation, and obligation calcifies into avoidance.

How Pressure Disguises Itself as Standards

Here’s what happens cognitively. You frame the guitar practice as “finally becoming the musician I know I can be.” Now you’re not just practicing—you’re auditioning for your own approval. Every wrong note is evidence. Every fumbled chord change is a referendum on whether you’re the kind of person who follows through.

Behavioral economist Katy Milkman’s work on “fresh starts” shows we’re more likely to pursue goals after temporal landmarks—New Year’s, birthdays, Mondays—because these moments create psychological distance from past failures. But that same research reveals the trap: when we attach identity to outcome (“becoming a runner” vs. “running today”), we create fragility. Miss one session and you’re not just behind on training. You’ve failed at being the kind of person you declared you were.

The irony is that the activities you don’t care much about—the ones you do purely for maintenance or mild obligation—you just do. You don’t avoid washing dishes because there’s no identity pressure in clean dishes. But the novel? The business idea? The creative project that could change things? Those sit untouched precisely because they matter.

Strategy 1: Time-Bound Permission to Be Bad

Sarah, a designer who’d been “planning to learn 3D modeling” for two years, finally started when she reframed it completely. Not “I’m becoming a 3D artist” but “I have permission to be terrible at Blender for 30 minutes on Tuesday nights.” The shift wasn’t motivational—it was structural. She set a timer, opened tutorials, and the only rule was she didn’t have to be good, she just had to be present.

What surprised her: the first three sessions felt like drowning. The interface made no sense, her renders looked like abstract disasters. But because she’d given herself permission to be bad, she didn’t have to avoid the evidence of being bad. By week four, she noticed something strange. She’d start the timer and then forget to check it. The session would run 45 minutes, then an hour. The work was still mediocre, but it had stopped being a referendum on who she was. It was just… work.

The mechanism: time-bound permission creates a container for incompetence. You’re not declaring “I’m going to master this”—you’re declaring “I’m allowed to suck at this until 8:47 PM.” The avoidance dissolves because there’s nothing to avoid. You already accepted the worst-case scenario before you started.

Strategy 2: The Maintenance Day

Jason wanted to write fiction but hadn’t touched his manuscript in eight months. His breakthrough wasn’t inspiration—it was removing expectation entirely. He scheduled “maintenance days”: Thursdays at 6 AM, he’d open the document and write one sentence. Not a good sentence. Not a sentence that advanced the plot. Just proof that the file still opened.

Some Thursdays the sentence was: “The coffee was cold.” Some Thursdays he’d write the same sentence he wrote the week before, then delete it. What changed: after six weeks of this, he stopped monitoring whether he “felt like” writing. The question wasn’t “Am I inspired?” The question was “Is it Thursday?”

By month three, the maintenance days started bleeding over. A sentence became a paragraph became—on one strange Thursday—an entire scene he didn’t know was in him. But that only happened because he’d decoupled showing up from producing anything worth showing up for. The opposite of avoidance isn’t motivation. It’s indifference to your own expectations.

The Reframe: Desire Doesn’t Owe You Competence

Here’s what we get wrong about wanting things: we treat desire as a contract. “If I want this badly enough, I should be good at it” or “If this matters to me, it should come naturally.” But wanting something doesn’t obligate the universe—or your current skill level—to make it easy. The guitarist’s desire to play beautifully doesn’t make their fingers remember the chord changes. The writer’s vision for the perfect essay doesn’t make the first draft anything but clumsy.

The things you avoid aren’t avoided because you don’t want them. They’re avoided because you want them to already be done, and confronting the gap between vision and current reality feels like failure before you’ve started. But that gap isn’t evidence of inadequacy. It’s just the distance you get to travel.

Your specific weekly action: Pick one avoided thing. Schedule 25 minutes this week—not to complete it, but to be demonstrably bad at it. Set a timer. Show up. Be terrible with precision.

What becomes possible: you might discover that the thing you’ve been avoiding isn’t actually the work itself. It’s the weight you’ve been carrying about what the work means about you. Drop the weight, and the work becomes just work again. Sometimes that’s exactly enough to finally begin.

The thing you want doesn’t care whether you’re ready for it. It just sits there, waiting for you to stop avoiding the beautiful, clumsy process of not being good at it yet.

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