Barking Up The Wrong Tree March 13th, 2023 ---------------------------------------------------------------
Before we commence with the festivities, I wanted to thank everyone for helping my new book become a bestseller! To check it out, click [here](. --------------------------------------------------------------- New Neuroscience Reveals 6 Secrets That Will Increase Your Attention Span ([Click here]( to read on the blog) Weâve all wondered about it. Youâre not crazy: yes, our attention spans really are declining. In 2004, people averaged 150 seconds on a computer screen before switching to a different screen. In 2012, that dropped to 75 seconds. Studies from 2016 to 2021 showed it had dropped again to somewhere between 44 to 50 seconds. And thatâs an average. So half the time itâs shorter than that. Yes, I know, now you want a t-shirt that says, âI Read Ericâs Blog And All I Got Was A Greater Sense Of My Own Inadequacy.â Modern digital life has screwed us up more than we suspected, and we already suspected quite a bit. Well, if you canât focus, you canât read these posts anymore, so out of pure self-interest I have some remedies for the problem. And the goal here isnât just to be more productive but also to increase overall well-being. Where will we find answers? Gloria Mark is a professor of informatics at the University of California, Irvine. Sheâs spent over two decades studying multitasking, interruptions, productivity and mood with the rise in digital technology. Her book is â[Attention Span: A Groundbreaking Way to Restore Balance, Happiness and Productivity]( Does this post seem too long? Then you really need to read this post. Letâs get to it... You Canât Be Focused All The Time Hereâs a tip for anyone wanting to become a machine of relentless focus: stop trying to become a machine of relentless focus. Despite the officially sanctioned fairy tales, you canât. Your brain does not work like that. Nice theory -- wrong species. Focusing for long stretches without breaks isnât natural. Your attention has rhythms. It ebbs and flows -- and sustained focus causes stress. You cannot run the engine at full speed all the time. You have a limited pool of attentional resources that get depleted with use. And studies show this depletion carries over to subsequent behaviors. After stressful work, weâre more impulsive. If youâve ever wondered why you can have such good habits at the office but be such an undisciplined mess at home â this is one of the reasons. So what do we do? First and foremost, get your sleep. Your brain is like your phone: most reliable when charged overnight. The research is clear here: âthe shorter the sleep duration the night before, the shorter was their attention duration on their computers and phones the next day.â And take breaks. You need them to reset and restore capacity. Thatâs all pretty straightforward. But what do we usually forget when trying to improve our attention spans? Moods Matter When setting goals, donât just think about what you want to accomplish, think about how youâd like to feel. Studies show that when people ask themselves what they wanted to achieve the next day and how they wanted to feel, that made the first hour of tomorrow more productive. Positive emotion helps us recover from the stress of sustained focus. Negative emotion is, well, a negative. And the more drained you are, the more negative emotions affect you. Annoying co-worker + sustained focus = bigger meltdown. Whatâs the most common stressor at work? Research shows Public Enemy #1 is email. It drives your blood pressure higher than a giraffeâs ears. Gloria did a study where a company actually turned off email for 5 days. Ditching it boosted productivity, increased attention spans and reduced stress. People communicated face to face more often â and felt better. The study also showed email does cause our attention spans to decline. The added anti-bonus? She found email time is focused time. Youâre wasting that high power thinky-brain energy on email instead of real work. So what do we do? Well, in the past Iâve recommended âbatching.â Checking email only during designated times rather than constantly throughout the day. But Gloria found that batching didnât reduce stress or increase productivity. (In fact, people who scored high on neuroticism were actually more stressed when email was batched.) Gloria acknowledges batching may have other benefits like fewer interruptions but itâs certainly not a panacea. What can we do? Itâs simple: send less email, get less email. Email is like stress you send to someone -- and they typically send you some stress right back. If we send fewer messages, on average, we receive fewer messages. Another issue when it comes to mood is when we bring work stress home. Research has shown that when we have unfinished tasks, our mind tends to keep thinking about them long after weâve left the office. This even has a name â the [Zeigarnik effect](. The trick here is, before you leave the office, to write down a list of the things that still need to be accomplished. Get that Pigpen cloud of unfinished tasks out of your head and on to some paper so you donât drive yourself crazy. This has measurable effects: âThose who wrote down their unfinished tasks fell asleep significantly faster than the other group. Interestingly, the more detailed the to-do lists of unfinished tasks, the faster people fell asleep.â Maybe reading this post is even more stressful than email. Want some good news? Rote Recharges You If social media is The Great Satan, why do we do it so much? Thereâs a neuroscientific reason: your brain is happiest when doing light, easy, engaging activities. Rote activities (like scrolling Instagram) make us feel good. Stuff like this makes for good breaks and restores our capacity for focus. So alternate between intense focus and something rote and mindless. Now the Type-Aâs and perfectionists might resist anything smacking of fun, so letâs amp this up a bit. Instead of struggling to resist the coyote howl of social media, use it as a reward to motivate you. Send positive messages on social platforms to get some friendly interaction and a positive emotional boost. And take the time to better design the experience. Yes, mute those shouty people on Twitter who spout negativity into your eyeholes. Another great tip from Gloria is to use design hooks to pull you out of potential rabbit holes. Weâve all taken a 5-minute social media break that lasted two hours. So set an alarm. Or only check Instagram 10 minutes before a scheduled meeting or phone call. And because Iâm such a huge fan of beating a dead horse, letâs talk about something you probably know, but arenât putting into action... Multitasking Is A Nightmare Researchers have known multitasking was a problem for nearly a century. Psychologist Arthur T. Jersild did studies showing it reduces performance back in 1927. I know, some people are saying, âBut I do fine when I multitask!â And I will hasten to remind you that the plural of anecdote is not data. Your brain cannot multitask. What youâre doing is quickly switching attention between two things and thereâs a cost with every switch. Keep doing it and the âfeesâ add up. (And, for the record, no, [women arenât better at multitasking than men]( How often do we switch? On average, every 3 minutes, 5 seconds. On a computer itâs even faster: 2.5 minutes. This is not how great things get done. Every time you switch, your brain needs to reconstruct its mental model of the task. (âWhere was I? Oh yeahâ¦â) This is one of the reasons you feel drained at the end of a busy day. The more often people switch, the lower their performance on the primary task and the lower their end-of-day productivity. It makes completing things take longer and increases the number of errors. The faster people switch, the higher they rate their stress. And thereâs this: âHeavy media multitaskers were found in a laboratory study to have more difficulty filtering out information not relevant to their task.â The best way to switch tasks so you donât build up too many âfeesâ is by finishing one thing before you move on to something else -- just like your grandparents did. Or, if youâre working on a bigger project, stop at a natural break point, like the end of a section. So far weâve dealt with the stuff inside your head. But what about external interruptions? Distractions Interruptions are bad. But if youâre looking for a new reason to avoid interruptions hereâs something striking: people are almost as likely to self-interrupt as they are to be interrupted by something else (56% vs 44%). And the two are connected. The more external interruptions you experience, the most subsequent internal interruptions you cause. People keep bothering you with things and you get a double hit because youâre then more likely to distract yourself by switching to email or social media. So what should we do? Gloria found that we work better when we have control over interruptions. Set times when itâs okay for people to bother you. Easier said than done, but the more you can set boundaries on whatâs coming at you, the better youâll focus. Use âfull screenâ mode to give yourself horse blinders. If at all possible, turn off notifications. Research shows itâs hard not to respond to notifications. (Ever wonder why apps so feverishly encourage you to turn them on?) Once youâre notified, your brain must exert effort just to resist checking. Itâs the Zeigarnik effect again; things linger in our minds and sap attentional resources. Research shows that [software]( which blocks you from accessing the internet does help. (The strokes this will cause you will be really small, I promise.) Blocking software was very helpful for people with low self-control. Those with high self-control actually got an even bigger boost in productivity â so much so that they reported feeling more tired at the end of the day. The blocking software made them relentless. So how do we fit this all together? Find Your Rhythm And Have A Plan Getting control of your attention fundamentally means thinking about how you use it. Are you getting value from the things youâre doing? Attention is limited, just like money. Think about the best ways to spend it. Before you do something, ask, âWhat effect will this have on the rest of my day and my goals?â Optimize not just for productivity but also for your mood. Higher productivity almost always means higher stress, so be careful about maximizing. We need to build in breaks to balance. Instead of planning on long, unbroken stretches of attention, find a rhythm and schedule that works for you. Ask yourself:
- Whatâs the best thing to start my day with?
- What taxes me the most?
- What replenishes me?
- When is the best time to do that stressful thing?
- When do I have the most attention? The least?
How do these answers all fit together? This should help guide you toward a default schedule and good rules of thumb. Knowing when your best hours are for each task and allocating time appropriately can work magic. Okay, time to round it all up and find out the single biggest secret when it comes to maximizing productivity... Sum Up Hereâs how to increase your attention span, according to neuroscience:
- You Canât Focus Forever: Stop trying. Get your sleep, take breaks, and find a rhythm that works for you.
- Moods Matter: Ask yourself not just what you want to get done but how you want to feel. Negative emotions reduce mental stamina. Send fewer emails. Email is stressful. (Except for my emails, which are like beautiful songbirds on a glorious spring day.)
- Rote Recharges You: Scrolling social media has its place. It can be soothing, like popping bubble wrap. Use it for breaks and rewards. Set alarms so it doesnât pull you into a rabbit hole.
- Multitasking Is A Nightmare: Switching costs add up and make you less productive and more stressed. One thing at a time.
- Interruptions: More external interruptions mean more internal interruptions. To the degree you are able, control distractions or put boundaries on them. Turn off notifications. If all else fails, go full-Odysseus-and-the-sirens: use internet blocking software.
- Find Your Rhythm And Have A Plan: Sometimes the thing we know the least about is ourselves. Watch yourself work, take notes, and find a rhythm that works best for you. The more you tailor the above advice, the better it will work.
You got to the end of this post! I knight your shoulders with the Royal Sword of Attention. So whatâs the most important thing? Knowing whatâs important. Tonight, designate the most critical thing for you to accomplish tomorrow. And throughout the day, knowing what you need to do next will smooth the transition from one activity to another. And what works for your day is also true for your life. Being certain of what matters most will guide you toward accomplishing what matters most. You will move through life like the hero in an action movie before the big battle: slow-mo, backlit, as hard rock music rises in the background. But then you must act on that knowledge. A lot of people tell me what is most important to them. I never listen. Because how they spend their time says it all. ***If you are one of those lovely people who bought "Plays Well With Others" please leave a review on Amazon [here](. Thanks!*** Email Extras Findings from around the internet... + Want to know how to sleep better -- and improve your memory? Click [here](. + Want to know how to evaluate people over time? Click [here](. + Want to know how to get people to follow through on what they say? Click [here](. + Miss my prior post? Here you go: [New Neuroscience Reveals 8 Secrets That Will Make Your Memory Stronger](. + Want to know how to tell when an online review is fake? Click [here](. + You read to the end of the email. Does this mean your attention span already improved... or that you didn't need this post in the first place? ANYWAY, thank you for reading. And now, yes, it's Crackerjack time -- Here are a few books worth a look: [Chaos: Charles Manson, the CIA, and the Secret History of the Sixties]( by Tom O'Neill. [Blood Will Out]( by Walter Kirn. [When We Cease to Understand the World]( by Benjamin Labatut. And [The Greatness Mindset]( by Lewis Howes.
Thanks for reading!
Eric PS: If a friend forwarded this to you, you can sign up to get the weekly email yourself [here](. This email was sent to {EMAIL}
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