Focus, Solved
Focus is one of those things everyone swears they need more of and almost no one is actually addressing correctly. In this episode, we dig into what the science actually says about attention spans (hint: your brain isn’t broken, it’s just overwhelmed), why the standard advice to “try harder” is probably making things worse, and what’s really driving your inability to sit down and get things done. We get into the neuroscience of explore vs. exploit modes, why flow states feel the way they do, and the four hidden triggers behind most focus problems, none of which have anything to do with your phone. Then we get into the practical stuff: environmental design, deep work frameworks, the maker vs. manager schedule, time boxing, batching, and why a dentist appointment in the middle of your morning can ruin your entire day. If you’re the kind of person who opens 14 browser tabs, switches between them for 40 minutes, and calls that “working”, well, this one’s for you.
Episode Notes
Referenced in This Episode
- Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace
- The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains by Nicholas Carr
- The Noonday Demon: An Atlas of Depression by Andrew Solomon
- Acedia (medieval concept of spiritual listlessness)
- Herbert Simon and the attention economy
- Microsoft Goldfish Attention Span Report, 2015 (debunked)
- Indistractable by Nir Eyal
- Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
- Atomic Habits by James Clear
- Deep Work by Cal Newport
- Maker's Schedule, Manager's Schedule by Paul Graham
- Matthew Walker (sleep researcher)
- Default mode network vs. task-positive network
- Locus coeruleus and norepinephrine regulation of attention
- Anterior cingulate cortex and cost-benefit analysis of attention
- Attention restoration theory
- Chronotype research (morning vs. evening types)
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