therapy with sapna logo | Best therapist in pune

Therapy with Sapna

therapy with sapna logo | Best therapist in pune

Therapy
with
Sapna

therapy with sapna logo | Best therapist in pune

Therapy
with
Sapna

The Psychology of “I’ll Start From Tomorrow”

As a therapist, I hear one sentence more often than almost any other:

“I know what I need to do… I’ll start from tomorrow.”

It comes from people who are intelligent, aware, and genuinely want to change.
Yet they feel stuck — and ashamed for feeling stuck.

Let me tell you what’s really happening.

One of my clients once said:

  • Mam, I want to wake up early and work on myself. Every night I plan it. But in the morning… I just can’t.”
  • This is not laziness.
  • This is a nervous system protecting itself.

When the brain senses effort, uncertainty, or emotional discomfort, it shifts into a safety mode. In that mode, starting today feels threatening — so the mind offers relief through delay.

Tomorrow feels emotionally safer than today.

Why the Brain Prefers Delay

From a psychological point of view:

  • The brain values comfort over growth 
  • Familiar pain feels safer than unfamiliar effort 
  • Change activates fear circuits, even if the change is positive

So when someone says I’ll start tomorrow, their brain is actually saying:

“I’m overwhelmed right now. I need to feel safe first.”

Another Client Insight

A working woman in her 30s once told me:

“I keep postponing exercise and self-care. Then I blame myself for being weak.”

What she didn’t realize was that her nervous system was already overloaded — work stress, emotional responsibilities, mental fatigue.

Her procrastination was not failure.
It was a signal of burnout.

The Damage of Repeated “Tomorrow”

Each time we postpone:

  • Self-trust reduces
  • Confidence weakens
  • Inner criticism increases

Over time, people stop believing themselves.

I often tell my clients:

“Your brain remembers not what you promise — but what you repeat.”

What Actually Works (Therapeutic Approach)

Instead of asking clients to “be disciplined,” I guide them to:

  • Reduce emotional pressure
  • Start with actions that feel safe
  • Focus on consistency, not perfection

Even 2–5 minutes of action helps rewire the brain toward trust and control.

A Gentle Reminder

Healing and change do not happen through force.
They happen through compassionate structure.

If you’ve been saying “I’ll start from tomorrow,” don’t judge yourself.
Ask instead:

“What feels possible for me today — without fear?”

That question alone can begin the shift.

If you see yourself in this pattern of “I’ll start from tomorrow”, know this —
nothing is wrong with you. Your mind may simply be asking for understanding, not pressure.

Change doesn’t require force.
It requires clarity, emotional safety, and the right support.

 

💬 Work With Me

 

If procrastination, emotional overwhelm, or self-doubt are affecting your daily life, therapy can help you understand why it’s happening — and how to move forward without burnout.

 

👉 Book a therapy session:
🔗 https://therapywithsapna.com/therapy-services

👉 Explore how therapy works:
🔗 https://therapywithsapna.com/services/

👉 Read more psychology insights:
🔗  https://therapywithsapna.com/knowledge-cente/

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