Frequently slow deadline? Possible errors in your parents

If you are constantly scared before the deadline - the time when your customers and bosses will top up on you, the cause is sometimes not on you.

Someone said, life since starting to sit in a school chair is a series of " run" deadlines - or deadlines.

At school, you must submit homework on time. University is a series of studies with mid-term essays. Then when you work, your customers and your boss are the " deadline " on your head.

Picture 1 of Frequently slow deadline?  Possible errors in your parents
Life is the running string to escape the deadline.

Therefore, if you are a person who is late in the deadline, it is also worrying. The thing is, errors sometimes are not yours, but how to raise from your parents . That's what recent research from New York University concluded.

Specifically, the survey conducted on 292 university students - 157 women and 135 men. Applicants will self-assess a range of actions and habits from an early age: meal time, bedtime, time with family, friends, and time spent on extracurricular activities.

Picture 2 of Frequently slow deadline?  Possible errors in your parents
The sooner a family has a habit of repeating, the less likely it is that the child will have trouble arranging time.

Research results show that the sooner a family has a stable repeating habit, the less likely it will be for children later on to arrange time and concentration.

"Preliminaryly, our research helps to understand how daily routine affects how time is arranged, thereby minimizing the concentration difficulties of growing up" - Jennifer Weil Malatras, the leading psychologist of the study, said.

Malatras said: "The problem of concentration may be related to many corollaries, even when studying and working. The results of this and future studies will be very useful to understand more about images. from family, through which there will be appropriate adjustments ".

Picture 3 of Frequently slow deadline?  Possible errors in your parents
The problem of concentration may be related to many bad consequences, even when going to school and work.

This result also comes from a further study - indicating that daily routine habits can affect children who have a lack of parents (due to divorce or someone who died).

This stability is probably more important than the frequency with which they occur. "For example, a divorced family should still ensure that the child has stable and reasonable habits, such as bedtime and time to participate in extracurricular activities. This will help their later lives. Malatras said.