Stand up, shift posture, move rooms. Signal a new mode. Physical state change is the fastest way to break the freeze.
One physical action, not the whole task. Not “write the report” — “open a blank document.” Not “clean the kitchen” — “fill the sink.” Specificity prevents restart loops.
Start badly. Bad work creates momentum. Permission to produce garbage removes the perfection barrier that kills initiation. The goal is motion, not quality.
Continue, switch protocols, or do a body reset — but don’t restart from zero. Once the system is running, inertia does some of the work.
“Start small” works if your barrier is confusion. Useless if your barrier is fear. You don’t need a smaller task — you need permission to fail.
“Add music” works for low dopamine. Does nothing if you’re in body burnout and need to eat. Cognitive strategies don’t run on empty tanks.
“Just do it for 5 minutes” works sometimes, fails predictably when the barrier is misread. The intervention has to match the barrier. Generic advice doesn’t know your barrier. This is why people try every productivity hack and stay stuck.
Each barrier needs a different unlock. If you’re using the wrong tool for the wrong barrier, it doesn’t matter how solid the tool is. It won’t move the actual problem.
These work. But they only work if you’re using the right one for the right barrier. If you don’t know which barrier is active, you’re applying them at random and wondering why they’re not landing.
The diagnostic step isn’t optional — it’s the first step. Without it, you’re just trying harder.
These only work if you’re using the right tool for the right barrier. If you’re not sure which one you’re dealing with, run the Task Initiation Diagnostic. It routes you to the right protocol in under a minute.
→ Task Initiation Diagnostic