Single-tasking: A More Peaceful Way of Living

If you want to be fast, slow down

Steven R. Durgin
Forge

--

Photo by Karolina Grabowska from Pexels

If you don’t separate yourself from your distractions, your distractions will separate you from your goals and the life you want.” ~Unknown

Whoever wrote that, I would like to thank them. At times, the most subtle and insidious distraction is actually more work.

In our fast-paced world, it’s tempting to do multiple things at once. You want to get more done in less time, so you juggle. Or, at least, you try to. But is this really the most productive approach?

The myth of multitasking

In reality, it’s the polar opposite. Dr. David Meyer’s work revealed that even brief context switches can cost up to 40% of a person’s productive time.

Those who try to multitask are really just alternating between focusing on one thing and another (or several others) and the brain loses time and energy in those transitions.

If the goal is speed, speed depends on focus, and deep focus comes when the brain can apply itself to one set of data for a sustained period.

This is not to say that we can’t take breaks. We should take them often. We can even…

--

--

Steven R. Durgin
Forge
Writer for

Writes about personal growth. Figuring out what it means to be human.