What Are Distractions in a Nutshell (And How to Deal With Them) | LifeHack

Distractions are like roadblocks in your day, steering you off course. Taking control of those distractions puts you back in the driver’s seat of your time. It’s about focusing on the road ahead and not letting the small stuff take you off track.

This world, buzzing with countless elements vying for your attention, is the new normal. It’s as if everything around us is designed to pull us away from what really matters – our focus, our productivity, and our ability to get things done. It’s a monumental task to keep our eyes on the prize when there’s so much noise.

Imagine being in a boxing ring where, instead of one opponent, you’re pitted against many, all swinging at you from every direction. That’s what it’s like to fight against distractions. But here’s the kicker – according to the American Psychological Association,[1] when we hop from task to task, it isn’t a harmless jump. In fact, we end up squandering up to 40% of our productive time, simply because our brains need to readjust and redirect.

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What Are Distractions in a Nutshell (And How to Deal With Them) | LifeHack

Distractions are like roadblocks in your day, steering you off course. Taking control of those distractions puts you back in the driver’s seat of your time. It’s about focusing on the road ahead and not letting the small stuff take you off track.

This world, buzzing with countless elements vying for your attention, is the new normal. It’s as if everything around us is designed to pull us away from what really matters – our focus, our productivity, and our ability to get things done. It’s a monumental task to keep our eyes on the prize when there’s so much noise.

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Have Trouble Concentrating? Try These Suggestions | Entrepreneur.com

overwhelmedWe all know the feeling of being overwhelmed, of being beset by distractions. Too many things clamor for your attention. People are trying to reach you, by phone, email, text, Twitter, or old-fashioned yelling up the stairs. Colleagues interrupt. You need to update, check in, post, or ping. Ads jump at you from the most unlikely places. Devices buzz, ring, chirp, and vibrate.

There are steps you might consider to quiet the buzz in your brain – even if you don’t want to take up meditation. In addition to feeling calmer and more focused, you’ll probably be more efficient, too. Turns out that people aren’t very good at thinking about two things at once. One study showed that when people were interrupted to respond to email or IM, it took about 15 minutes for them to resume a serious mental task.

So consider taking steps like these, at least occasionally. They may not all work for you, but you may find a few that will help you focus.

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Workplace Distractions: Here’s Why You Won’t Finish This Article – WSJ.com

Office workers are interrupted—or self-interrupt—roughly every three minutes, academic studies have found, with numerous distractions coming in both digital and human forms. Once thrown off track, it can take some 23 minutes for a worker to return to the original task, says Gloria Mark, a professor of informatics at the University of California, Irvine, who studies digital distraction.

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