Are you finding it tough to focus after vacation?
[Photo: Carol Yepes/Getty Images]

Are you finding it tough to focus after vacation?

Welcome readers! The Sunday edition of Fast Company Daily is dedicated to Work Smarter: a weekly newsletter of career, leadership, and productivity advice, curated by Fast Company’s Work Life editors,?Kathleen Davis ,?Lydia Dishman ?and?Julia Herbst .

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If you're struggling to find focus after vacation, read this

By Lydia Dishman

I’m just back from a short vacation and let me tell you, the struggle to focus is real, people. It could have something to do with the heat. Or it could have something to do with the number of questions from colleagues I’ve gotten since I logged on while whittling down my inbox. Either way, the result is the same: Productivity is down and my cognitive function feels like the equivalent of a plate of undercooked scrambled eggs.

The ick factor of runny breakfast food notwithstanding, I snapped to attention when I recalled a piece I’d written some years ago while experimenting with?“monotasking.” The idea was to do just one thing at a time to see if the science behind multitasking—specifically that it takes 23 minutes to regain your prior focus once distracted—would bear out in my workday. Surprise! Although it took me a while, the forced effort to focus rewarded me tenfold in increased productivity.

For the skeptics and lifelong multitaskers who insist they’re proficient and productive, multiple studies have been done to bust the myth that you can pull off the juggling act with aplomb. A previous?Fast Company report rounded some data up:

“A study at the University Of London found that subjects who multitasked experienced drops in their IQ comparable to someone who missed a night of sleep. Even if multitaskers feel like they’re getting more done, they’re working at a much lower cognitive level and costing companies billions of dollars in lost productivity.

And the cognitive costs get worse. If you’re a multitasker, you might have done some serious permanent damage, as a study that ran MRI scans on the brains of multitaskers found they had less brain density in areas that controlled empathy and emotions.”

Another somewhat more disturbing finding came from a study by researchers at Ohio State University that found distractions—even if you try to ignore them—can impact your memory .

The solution is simple: minimize distractions and stop multitasking. I can tell you from experience that pulling focus (even to make a pour-over coffee without checking Slack) is easier said than done. However, it is helpful to understand how your brain works so you can work with it to create new and more productive patterns.

Understand the types of attention

You can start by understanding that humans have four different types of attention . According to Dr. Gloria Mark, you’re most likely to fall prey to every ping right around the post-lunch afternoon slump. You can also benefit from understanding your chronotype (which times of day are best for focused work) as well as energy management (knowing which tasks drain you and which leave you energized).

Observe feelings to support focus

Cognitive scientist and longtime?Fast Company contributor Art Markman also observed: “As you get more sensitive to shifts from your current task to something else, you should also pay attention to the feelings you have just before you switch from one thing to another. For example, you might find that you check your email when you get a little frustrated with the task you’re doing. In that case, the feeling of frustration is acting as a cue that you use to trigger the behavior to shift your attention to something else.”

See attention like a flashlight?

If you struggle with this you can try what Amishi Jha, director of the Contemplative Neuroscience for the Mindfulness Research and Practice Initiative suggests and think about your attention like a flashlight . “In all the moments prior to our goal-related task, it’s somewhere else. Finally, we can direct it to the task at hand,” she explained. “When you start seeing all the components that are separate from the task, you can see that there’s a cost associated with them. With awareness and attention, we can be more efficient in accomplishing our goals.”


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Drashti Chag

LinkedIn Marketing Expert?? Passionate Software Engineer??& Web Designer??Al/ML?? Top Data Science Intern ?? Finalist of SSIP Hackathon??? Infosys & Google & Microsoft Certified ??Passionate about Solving Problems????

4 个月

?????? Fast Company

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Lori Broskett

Creative Strategist and Founder at Nine Planet Design

4 个月

Vacation? ? ?

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OK Bo?tjan Dolin?ek

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SharonAnn Hamilton

?? Learn to Travel & Live Abroad | Do you work remotely? | Experience affordable slow travel | Write a book? | Blogger? |???Empty Nest? | Don’t wait | Travel at will | Freedom Calls | ?? Prayer Warrior | CERT Volunteer

4 个月

Today is a travel day after a trip. We use this time to re-commit to short-term goals. We organize our thoughts and plan the week ahead even as we anticipate the delight of our comfy bed. The focus comes in refreshed energy for our goals.

Christine Lewis-Anderson BA,MT(ASCP) BB

Perpetual Inventory Clerk at Macy's

4 个月

Love this

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