Attention Management Beats Time Management
Sveip for å vise menyen
In 2010, time management died. Most people didn't notice.
Before 2010, productivity meant allocating blocks of time. Calendar from 9 to 5, this hour for emails, this hour for the report, this hour for the meeting. If you protected the time, you got the work done.
That model worked because attention was free. You sat down at 10 AM with one screen, one task, and stayed there.
After smartphones, that's gone. The screen has 30 things on it. The watch buzzes. Slack pings. Someone @mentions you. You start the report, you check the buzz, you lose 20 minutes returning to where you were. The clock says one hour. Your brain delivered 15 minutes of actual thinking.
The Shift
Attention researcher Maura Thomas calls this the central skill of the 21st century — not time management, attention management.
The blocks of time on your calendar are meaningless. What matters is blocks of unfragmented attention.
You can have 8 hours and produce nothing. You can have 90 minutes of real attention and produce something that matters.
The New Question
Stop asking: "When will I do this?"
Start asking: "When will I have the attention to do this well?"
The second question is harder. It forces you to admit that your morning is precious and your post-lunch hours are mostly garbage for hard thinking. It forces you to admit that "I'll do it tonight after the kids are asleep" is a lie you keep telling yourself.
Time is the wrong unit. Attention is the right one. Every chapter in this course is built around that flip.
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