From distraction to concentration in a few simple steps
For years, I enthusiastically produced content: books, articles, blog posts, and talks – averaging a book and a half plus five articles per year. Since about 2020, my productivity has plummeted – leaving me totally frustrated.
There were no external causes, even the pandemic didn’t affect me, thanks to a nice home office and online work options — so no excuses. To find a way out of the misery, I put my own working habits to the test – and diagnosed a massive loss of concentration.
No sooner had I started a task the next thing I knew I was doing something else
I distracted myself by checking my email inbox every so often, and I was addicted to checking what was going on in the world on various news websites - constantly interrupting the original task.
You’re perfectly right - this sounds completely insane. Somehow these bad habits had sneaked silently into my life.
News is to the mind what sugar is to the body.
Rolf DobelliAuthor, Entrepreneur
And then two lightning bolts struck almost simultaneously - a book and a blog post.
I significantly changed my (digital) life as a result and within only two weeks I get more done again, sleep better, and am significantly happier.
The short version: news diet and productive smartphone use.
For years, I’ve been producing content on a fairly regular basis in the form of talks, books, journal articles, blog posts, podcasts, and contributions to open-source projects
(To quantify that: 30+ books or book editions and about a hundred articles in various magazines within the last 20 years - that’s still one and a half books and five articles on average per year).
In the last few months, I kind of rant out of steam, which made me personally very discontent. In early 2022 I published the last blog post, and in late 2021 the last articles. For the third time, I postponed the new edition of the arc42-in-Action …
I had plenty of ideas, but somehow I couldn’t put them down on paper. And unfortunately, ideas alone are not enough - the ideas also have to be made into reality, prepared in a structured way, and written down in a comprehensible way.
Moreover, I was always a dedicated textbook reader - and binge-read a new book every few weeks. That, too, became more and more difficult for me - even though I was genuinely interested in the topics of the unread books on the shelf.
Now, I could chalk it all up to the pandemic, my age (don’t ask…), or whatever. But finding bogus excuses is just not my thing.
“You’ve got to do something about that,” I told myself. At first, I tried to increase my productivity and creativity by getting up earlier. No such luck.
Staying up later in the evening didn’t work either.
Then I tried what I’ve recommended (successfully!) countless times in my job as an IT consultant: A systematic analysis of the situation, a self-review, so to speak.
I tried to analyze my own way of working. I quickly noticed that it was becoming increasingly difficult for me to concentrate on individual tasks: No sooner had I started a task than I was already doing something else in between - or distracted myself with emails or various news websites. Likewise, I sit at a lecture - and check the INNOQ Slack channels in between. Furthermore, I continue to write on a slide - and take a brief look at my smartphone to see what’s been happening on WhatsApp or Signal. And since I’m holding the phone in my hand anyway, I can read a few news items on BBC-News there too.
Did you know that smartphone users unlock and look at their phones an average of 80–100 times a day (source: Cision Newswire, several other sources giving similar numbers). I was one of them.
News websites like CNN, WSJ, and BBC had me as a permanent customer.
For me, these context switches already had addiction-like traits. Even while I was watching a series (yes, I admit that I like to binge on one or two episodes), I would pick up the phone or tablet in between and casually check the news. Against my better judgment, I also checked my e-mails first thing in the morning before I even drank my first espresso. And in my inbox, there were always various news summaries, from stock-market news, and international politics up to technology updates.
Unfortunately, all this news has done me more harm than good: For my coaching and consulting engagements, I don’t need to know anything about current domestic or foreign politics. For my software architecture and engineering workshops, neither stock market trends nor the details of international terrorist acts are of any value. My articles and books deal with software and software engineering, not on climate or politics.
Constantly switching between (sophisticated) technical work, the news from around the world, and private communication on personal and professional topics, I would argue, cost me a significant amount of my ability to concentrate.
My brain (apparently) doesn’t handle frequent context switches well. Moreover, my brain must have unconsciously perceived distractions as something positive - and, like Pavlov’s dog, kept wanting more of them, at increasingly shorter intervals.
A (Pavlovian) dog
I noticed the lack of concentration myself. However, my own fainthearted attempts, with Pomodoro timer and calming sounds, clearly failed.
Effective remedies from the outside had to come first — two major sources helped me:
While travelling to an architecture workshop, I sat on the train, not reading the news for a change, but attempting to read a book. For some time now, I have been using the online service Blinkist to read short summaries of various non-fiction books, primarily to find out for myself whether I would then like to read the original of these books in their entirety.
So - I’m sitting on the train and reading one of these Blinks, when I’m struck by a mental lightning bolt: I felt so caught by Rolf Dobelli’s explanations, caught in my concentration trap, that I spontaneously decided to get serious. Let me quote from this book:
News is not good for us:
It clouds our mind, distorts our view of what is really important, robs us of time, makes us depressed and paralyzes our willpower.
Rolf DobelliAuthor, Entrepreneur
Paralyze my willpower, rob me of time.
That was precisely my problem.
Still sitting on the train, I decided to try a strict break from any news (news, not e-mails or other messages) for a while.
However, that wasn’t enough: I remembered a blog post I had read a few years ago - about the productive configuration of smartphones, which has the promising subtitle Configure Your iPhone to Work for You, Not Against You.
I therefore decided to optimize my iPhone for maximum productivity - and to reduce or even eliminate distractions.
(Re)configure smartphone for high productivity and minimal distractions.
Reduce distractions on tablets and computers.
Add to that slight changes I made to my daily habits: I’ve resolved (and managed for a few weeks now) to stop staring at my phone in the morning, and to stop using my iPhone at all in the evening after 8 PM at the latest (exception: setting an alarm for the next morning).
During the aforementioned train ride, I cancelled my subscription to my formerly favourite online news portal (the German “Spiegel-Online”) and deleted the associated app from my iPhone. I used the initial motivation to cancel additional news subscriptions and deleted the related apps from my smartphone and iPad so that I wouldn’t be tempted.
I have resolved very firmly not to read any news at all for a while. In other words, a zero news diet. That was really hard for me for two or three days. Yet that alone was a startling realization for me: I was actually addicted to news and variety… and cold withdrawal is hard with any kind of addiction, as you know.
I purposefully invested the hours gained each day: As a kind of early reward for my zero news diet, I treated myself to an interesting technical book as a PDF (by the way, the infamous “Fast Thinking - Slow Thinking” by the great David Kahnemann, which I always wanted to read in my native German language because the English original had slightly exceeded language skills). The result was I was thrilled to have made good progress without any distractions.
To support my news diet, I instructed my browser (Firefox) to not present me with recommendations for supposedly interesting or important topics on new tabs or windows.
The above quote, “Configure Your iPhone to Work for You, Not Against You,” sets the objective: It’s the subtitle of a very long blog post by Tony Stubblebine – who, in addition to configuration suggestions, also gives various advice for being more attentive and healthy, totally worth reading in my opinion.
I summarize the things most important for me, which he illustrates in his article with many screenshots and explanations:
Turn off (almost) all notifications – so those red dots aren’t constantly vying for your attention or making you feel guilty.
Hide social media apps for as good as possible. Facebook, Instagram, Twitter & Co act like drugs. They deserve to be removed from the start/home screen and moved somewhere in the back of your smartphone. I deleted the Twitter app and kept Instagram only because it allows me to catch up a bit with my adult children.
Messaging apps (email, WhatsApp, Signal and co.) go into a folder, and preferably on the second screen of that folder. For me, it looks like this (K11n stands for communication):
Turn on do-not-disturb-mode, the longer, the better. At least from evening till morning.
Lifting the phone should not unlock it. This setting is called “Display & Brightness/Activate on Lift” on the iPhone - and should definitely be turned off.
Turn on the screen time widget – this gives me control over all the things I spend my smartphone time on… Meanwhile, I have made a sport out of getting to the smallest values possible.
Turn on content and app restrictions. I only allow myself 15 minutes a day for email and Instagram.
Install a swipe keyboard app, so I can text faster on the phone and not have to awkwardly click each letter. I use Microsoft Swiftkey (yes correct, a Microsoft app on the iPhone) for this, others do better with Google’s Gboard.
Wallpapers in muted colours. I chose a completely black home screen, and a reduced colour lock screen:
In case you want to be a bit stricter with yourself, there are various blockers for popular desktop platforms that can prevent access to certain websites or applications for certain times. These can improve your digital self-discipline. I tried ColdTurkey and like it a lot. However, I hope to become disciplined enough to stick to my new habits without this electronic tether… at least in the near future.
Besides the aforementioned settings and the zero news diet, I like to listen to soundscapes for (supposedly) better mental focus when working intensively at my desk. I write allegedly because I like this kind of aural background, but can’t prove that it helps me in any way. My family, by the way, thinks it’s horrible.
If you want to try it out: My two favourites are Endel and brain.fm. Works on both smartphones and desktops (but please don’t say afterwards I didn’t warn you…).
I still haven’t gotten comfortable with Pomodoro timers, they annoy me more than they help.
Why don’t you start a self-experiment, and refrain from reading sports, politics, business, and technology news as much as possible for a while? Reduce your smartphone time drastically for one or two weeks, and enjoy the time gained with a good book, a personal conversation or dare to do a previously abandoned activity that has been left undone so far (due to a perceived lack of time…)
Good luck – and I look forward to your feedback.
Thanks to Jochen Christ, Joachim Praetorius, Jan Seeger and Ben Wolf for reviews and constructive comments. @m has drastically improved readability and wording.