Chronic procrastination in adults is widely understood as emotion regulation through avoidance of aversive task-related affect, with Sirois and Pychyl supplying the dominant account. The account is incomplete for a clinically important subgroup whose avoided affect functions as threat-system activation rather than ordinary aversion. This article defines Trauma-Derived Procrastination (TDP) as a candidate clinical formulation, places it within a five-way differential of adult procrastination presentations, and identifies the conditions under which standard interventions may become countertherapeutic. The construct integrates four converging literatures: procrastination as emotion regulation; the neural signatures of action control and the trauma-linked brain-behaviour pathway reported respectively by Schlüter et al. and by the Feng group; the Brandstätter action-crisis tradition; and the developmental-adversity literature centred on the Adverse Childhood Experiences study. The construct is anchored empirically in the recent mediation finding by Xu et al. (2025), who demonstrated in a combined sample of 1,189 participants that childhood trauma predicts procrastination through joint mediation by trait anxiety and reduced self-control, with neural instantiation in large-scale cognitive-control and salience networks. TDP is defined by the conjunction of chronic procrastination meeting Steel's criteria, selective task-class triggering consistent with threat-template activation, and a developmental history compatible with calibration of the threat system at lowered threshold. The five-way differential distinguishes TDP from the cultural misattribution to laziness, ADHD-procrastination, depression-procrastination, and AVPD-adjacent procrastination. Standard discipline-coaching may become countertherapeutic in TDP by intensifying the shame that maintains the cycle. Three clinical shifts - naming the threatened feeling, self-compassion, sub-threshold task initiation - reorient practitioner attention from discipline toward affective recalibration. Where TDP is anchored in documented or strongly suspected complex interpersonal adversity, phase-oriented trauma treatment is indicated. An empirical research agenda including psychometric validation, the testing of the countertherapeutic prediction, and the operationalisation of task-class selectivity as a screening dimension is specified. Two composite clinical vignettes illustrate the construct without reporting individual case data.
Ashok Riehm (Thu,) studied this question.