When you need to concentrate on an important activity, try to work for 90 minutes without interruptions, because rebooting your brain can take up to 20 minutes. Abandon vain attempts to "multitask," because when you try to attend to two things at once-phoning while checking e-mail-you're simply switching rapidly between them, which takes longer and generates more errors. Remember that your electronics are your servants, not your masters, and don't let them choose your focus for you. In general, however, it's far more productive to focus on top-down targets you've selected to create the kind of experience you want to invite.Īlong with making clear choices about what things merit your precious attention online, there are some other simple ways to protect the quality of your daily life from technological interference. Left to its own devices, your involuntary, "bottom-up" attention system asks, "What's the most obvious, compelling thing to zero in on here? That e-mail prompt? This colorful ad?" Fortunately, evolution has also equipped you with a voluntary, "top-down" attention system that poses a different question: "What do you want to focus on right now? Ordering that new novel, then checking the weather report, then getting back to work, right?" Sometimes, it's fun to just wander around online, allowing your mind to be captured by random, bottom-up distractions. How can you get the highest experiential return for this cognitive capital? By focusing on some screen or on playing your guitar? On IM-ing your old friend or joining her for a walk?Ĭonsidering the Internet's countless temptations and distractions, deciding how best to invest your time and attention when you're online is particularly challenging. The realization that your life-indeed, yourself-largely consists of the physical objects and mental subjects that you've focused on, from e-bay bargains to world peace, becomes even more sobering when you consider that, as the expression "pay attention" suggests, like your money, your concentration is a finite resource. As William James succinctly puts it, "My experience is what I agree to attend to." When you zero in on a sight or sound, thought or feeling, your brain spotlights and depicts that "target," which then becomes part of the subjective mental construct that you nonetheless confidently call "reality" or "the world." In contrast, things that you ignore don't, at least with anything like the same clarity. When you sit at your computer, will you focus on writing that report or aimless web browsing? At the meeting, will you attend to the speaker or to your BlackBerry? Research suggests that your choices are more consequential than you may suspect. Science's new understanding of attention can help shape your answers to this question, which pops up all day long in various forms.
#Rapt attention and the focused life how to#
Amazon Exclusive: Winifred Gallagher on RaptĪ wise research psychiatrist once told me that he had identified life's greatest problem: How to balance self and others, or your need for independence with your need for relationship? Since writing Rapt, I've come to believe that we now face a fundamental psychological challenge of a different sort: How to balance your need to know-for the first time in history, fed by a bottomless spring of electronic information, from e-mail to Wikipedia-with your need to be? To think your thoughts, enjoy your companions, and do your work (to say nothing of staring into a fire or gazing dreamily at the sky) without interruption from beeps, vibrations, and flashing lights? Or perhaps worse, from the nagging sense that when you're off the grid, you're somehow missing out?