Return to Blog

Warning Signs: "Just" and "Should"

I read a very nice article which summarized some relevant concerns of our advancing technology. It dovetails with the idea that there are certain warning words I've discovered in myself when I'm about to procrastinate.

Specifically, these are the words "just" and "should":

  • I’m just going to … (check email for a second, give that person a call, etc.)
  • I should be doing blah or bleh.

 

They both deny some aspects of reality.

 

Just

"Just" suggests that whatever it is I'm doing will not be impacted by a moment's diversion. However, it is the diversion at all that disrupts the task, not just the time taken.

  • The denial here is that attention is not breakable or is stronger than it is.

 

Should

The latter "should" is trickier. It implies circumstances which do not exist. While perhaps "I should be reading x, y or z" - the reality is that I am not. "Should" then does several things:

  • It actively skips over the circumstances of how I got to what I am doing now, and
  • it skips over how x, y, and z have been avoided.

Without that information, "should" becomes both:

  • a moral judgment (e.g. "I'm lazy" ) as it becomes the only explanation and
  • yet another means of avoiding a task as I do not actively map how to get there taking these circumstances into account.

 

Certainly other warning terms exist, both subtle and those less so, and I'm not about to write a letter asking these words be removed from our vocabulary. But when attention has a tendency to waver, it is good to consider that there may be warning signs.

 

Divider

Recent Articles

AI vs Agency

Feb 28, 2026

I’ve got a problem. I don’t know how this works. I don’t know how to write this. I don’t know the best order. ...

Bottom card separator

On Decision, Indecision

Feb 13, 2026

Check out the podcast version of today's newsletter at Rhythms of Focus (Apple Podcasts, Spotify). Kourosh “Sh...

Bottom card separator
Return to Blog

Publications

Over the years, I’ve written five main works on productivity. Sign up for the Weekly Wind Down newsletter to get free previews.

Kourosh Dini courses Kourosh Dini books
See all the publications