People have been encouraging me to share my anti-akrasia tricks, but it feels inappropriate to dedicate a top-level post solely to unproven techniques that work for some person and may not work for others, so:
Go ahead and share your anti-akrasia tricks!
Let's make it an open thread where we just share what works and what doesn't, without worrying (yet) about having to explain tricks with deep theories, or designing proper experiments to verify them. However, if you happen to have a theory or a proposed experiment in mind, please share.
Bragging is fine, but please share the failures of your techniques as well – they are just as valuable, if not more.
Note to readers – before you read the comments and try the tricks, keep in mind that the techniques below are not yet proven supported or explained by proper experiments, and are not yet backed by theory. They may work for their authors, but are not guaranteed to work for you, so try them at your own risk. It would be even better to read the following posts before rushing to try the tricks:
I have several procrastination techniques as well as some meta-techniques I apply to other forms of akrasia as well.
First, I use flexibility to deal with procrastination, for example I maintain multiple different to-do lists to avoid the natural tendency to over-hierarchialize the tasks I need to do. I find my procrastination tends to be focused, so being able to out-flank that particular akrasia can be very helpful.
I extend this idea to anti-akrasia techniques, as a meta-technique, keeping a variety available at any time and being willing to jump between them - based on observation, and in the moment experimentation. Sometimes a focusing technique may be very helpful, sometimes a relaxation technique, sometimes a forced multi-task will shove the akrasic loop out of my mind, and sometimes nothing else will do except an extreme expenditure of will and adrenaline (in an emergency).
The point is our minds easily turn any consistently applied method into a habit, and as a habit it can become the impression of the method rather than what works. Of course the other side of the sword is that part of akrasia is that sometimes what you need won't even occur to you, habitual or otherwise. Remember, some crises of will happen not in decisions but in awareness.
A second technique I use in procrastination is to be a good loser. Procrastination can be an excellent opportunity if exploited appropriately. I can refresh my mental reserves. I can tap unused mental "cycles" to work on long term projects (even, if I'm careful, the very projects that I put off). I can even foreshorten my replacement task by embracing it, which if I'm are clever can be replaced by something else I've been procrastinating on.
This idea also generalizes to a meta-technique, I should gain some advantage even when I give in to akrasia. Even if its just the ability to overcome it better at a later time.