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5 Japanese techniques to overcome laziness

ETimes.in | Last updated on - Nov 16, 2025, 17:27 IST
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5 Japanese techniques to overcome laziness

Laziness is a common challenge when trying to stay motivated or productive. Fortunately, Japanese culture offers several timeless philosophies and techniques that can help you build momentum, stay focused, and overcome inertia more gently and effectively. By integrating these ideas into your daily life, from mindset shifts to small habits, you can make consistent progress without feeling overwhelmed.

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Kaizen

Kaizen means “continuous improvement” - a core Japanese principle emphasising steady, small progress rather than sweeping changes. When you feel lazy, applying Kaizen means breaking your tasks into tiny, manageable steps. For example, instead of committing to an hour of work, start with just five minutes. Over time, these small daily improvements accumulate into meaningful results, keeping momentum sustainable and resistance to starting far lower.

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Ikigai

Ikigai is the concept of a “reason for being” - combining what you love, what you’re good at, what the world needs, and what you can be rewarded for. When you align your tasks with your ikigai, you tap into intrinsic motivation. This deep sense of purpose makes even the mundane things feel meaningful, reducing laziness because your work becomes a way to live out what truly matters to you.

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Nemawashi

Nemawashi literally means “laying the roots” and refers to careful planning and preparation before taking action. In personal productivity, it’s the habit of preparing small steps in advance, organizing your environment, and removing obstacles before starting a task. This technique reduces procrastination because you are already partially prepared, making it easier to take the first step and maintain momentum without feeling overwhelmed.

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Shoshin (beginner’s mind)

Shoshin, or “beginner’s mind,” comes from Zen Buddhism; it encourages you to approach tasks and challenges with openness, curiosity, and humility, as if you are seeing them for the first time. This mindset helps you overcome laziness because it shifts your focus from worrying whether you’ll succeed to simply exploring, learning, and experimenting. That curiosity fuels action, even for tasks you’ve done many times.

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Hara Hachi Bu

Hara Hachi Bu is a principle from Okinawa meaning “to eat until you are 80% full.” While a dietary guideline, it has a greater lesson – self-control and moderation. Eating too much can slow you down and sap motivation, but stopping before you are full keeps your body and brain light. In a productivity context, it reinforces the concept of stopping short of you get to burned out, practicing moderation in all things, getting energy use to a balanced levels, and overcoming feelings of laziness and inertia.
Incorporating these five Japanese strategies into your life - can make you have a balanced, sustainable and motivating routine. It is not a set of tricks to fix fast, but contemplated cultural-grounded practices that promote long-term transformation and action.

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Copyright © May 8, 2026, 02.41AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service