Hi
You are not lazy or broken. What you describe often happens when studying has become linked in the brain with fear, pressure, past setbacks, and self-judgment. So when you sit to study, your nervous system treats books like danger and you freeze or avoid. This is common in anxiety cases and can look like “study phobia,” performance anxiety, or avoidance conditioning. The solution is not more guilt, but retraining the brain gently. Start with tiny non-threatening study targets: sit for 10 minutes only, no outcome pressure, just open material and begin. Use a timer, keep phone away, and stop after success. Repeat daily so studying becomes safer again.
Also work on the thoughts underneath: “If I study and fail again, it means I’m useless,” “I must do it perfectly,” or “I’m already behind.” These beliefs create paralysis. Break syllabus into micro tasks, reward completion, and focus on consistency over intensity. Since you’re functioning well otherwise, this pattern is treatable with CBT/exposure based work specifically for academic anxiety. You need targeted therapy for avoidance, not generic advice. Take therapy. You can connect with me on nine two six six seven two six zero six five.
Answered2026-04-19 11:09:53
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