Hello

Let's be friends.
Get latest update for our trusted applications Please select a valid form

How to Better Manage Your Time Using an ACT and SFBT Approach

How to Better Manage Your Time Using an ACT and SFBT Approach

Let me start with something you might already recognize in your own life.

You sit down to do something important, and almost immediately you feel resistance. Not always dramatic resistance—sometimes it’s subtle. You check your phone. You reorganize something. You think about doing it later. And before you know it, time has passed and the thing you meant to do is still there.

Most people explain this as a time problem. Not enough structure, not enough discipline, not enough motivation.

But if you look at it more honestly, something else is happening. It’s not that you don’t know what to do. It’s that in that moment, the task creates a feeling you don’t want to have. And your mind does what all human minds do: it tries to move you away from discomfort.

So you don’t avoid the task. You avoid the feeling the task creates.

That’s an important shift.

Because time itself doesn’t really behave differently for different people. What changes is how the brain experiences time. Your sense of time is constructed through attention, emotion, stress, and meaning. When you’re engaged, time disappears. When you’re resisting, it stretches and becomes heavy.

Same clock. Different internal experience.

This is where ACT and SFBT become useful—not as theories, but as practical ways to work with what’s actually happening in the moment.

From an ACT perspective, the goal is not to wait until you feel ready or motivated. It’s to stop treating uncomfortable thoughts and feelings as something that needs to disappear before you act.

So instead of asking, “How do I stop feeling like this?” you start asking something more useful:

Can I carry this feeling with me while I take the next step anyway?

That alone changes the relationship you have with procrastination. Because now the goal is not emotional control. It’s psychological flexibility.

And when you apply that in real time, a few questions become very practical:

What am I feeling right now that I don’t want to feel?
If this feeling stays with me, what is still the smallest step I can take?
If I stop fighting this feeling, what would I do next?
What matters enough here that I’m willing to feel a bit uncomfortable for it?

You’re not trying to eliminate the resistance. You’re learning not to obey it.

Now SFBT adds something different but equally important.

Instead of focusing too much on the problem, you start looking for exceptions—moments when things already go slightly better.

Because even if you struggle with procrastination, it’s never 100%. There are moments when you do start. Moments when you focus. Moments when things flow better than usual.

And those moments matter more than people think.

So instead of asking “Why am I like this?” you begin asking:

When was the last time this was even a little bit easier?
What was different in that moment?
What did I do differently, even in a small way?
What would a 5% better version of today look like?
What is already working, even slightly, that I can repeat?

This shifts attention from failure to evidence. And that matters because your brain tends to repeat what it notices.

If you keep noticing what’s not working, you reinforce stuckness.
If you start noticing what already works, even occasionally, you create options.

There’s also a very practical layer underneath all of this.

Most people don’t fail at big tasks. They fail at starting.

So the most effective change is usually not a better system—it’s a smaller entry point.

Not “write the report,” but open the document.
Not “clean the house,” but pick up one object.
Not “start working,” but do two minutes of anything related.

Because once movement starts, something important happens: the resistance often drops. Not always, but often enough that it becomes a strategy.

And if you zoom out even further, one of the most useful realizations is this: your sense of time is not reliable. We tend to underestimate how long things take and overestimate how much we’ll feel like doing them later.

So instead of relying on future motivation, it helps to rely on patterns:

What actually happened last time I did something like this?
How long did it really take, not how long I thought it would take?

That small shift alone can change how realistic your planning becomes.

If I bring it all together, managing time is less about control and more about awareness.

Awareness of what you’re feeling.
Awareness of what you’re avoiding.
Awareness of what already works.
And awareness that the next step is almost always smaller than you think.

You don’t need to feel ready. You don’t need perfect motivation. You don’t even need confidence first.

You just need to be willing to take one small step while everything is still imperfect.

And over time, that’s what actually changes your relationship with time—not better planning, but better moments of action inside imperfect days.

Sincerely Aygul TATLICI

Subscribe for monthly updates on mental health tips, therapy insights, and wellness strategies.

Stay connected with our community and receive valuable resources to support your mental health journey.

SubscriptionForm
We respect your privacy. Unsubscribe at any time.
Schedule An Appointment

Fill out the form below and I'll get back to you within 24 hours.

Appointment Form
Contact us

Maple, ON L6A

Let's Talk

Phone: +1 (365) 607-0532

Online Appointment
Psychology Today

Disclaimer

Coaching is not psychotherapy; coaching does not diagnose or treat mental health conditions. Coaching focuses on personal development, goal achievement, and mindset shifts. It is not a substitute for a serious mental health treatment, diagnosis, or psychotherapy.