Trimming the attention sails at Like It Matters
Friend of the Folders, Brian Oberkirch, has gone on a tempo-attentional crash diet:
I had a “no mas” moment. I have a project generating a ridiculous amount of non-productive email. I have social networking service emails crufting up my inbox. I burned time in online ‘debates’ I just shouldn’t have gotten involved in. And I read Tim Ferris’ 4 Hour Work Week, which unhinged my mind and helped me think totally differently about goals, workflow, and being a stringent gatekeeper of your time.
I’ve met with Tim Ferriss a couple times (fascinating guy) and have a galley copy of his new book sitting on my desk right now. With what Brian says (combined with the raves for the book I heard from a couple folks I trust last night), I expect I’ll be starting into it today.
Back to Brian’s project: while you may not necessarily need to make your world as completely devoid of noise and distraction as Brian has, I encourage you to review his list. There’s a gold mine of tips in there for ways you might also choose to wrest back your attention and start responsibly firewalling your time.
Loathe as I am to admit it, I’ve recently had to adopt one of Brian’s dicta and have already used it twice today:
Make ‘no’ the default answer for new project/app review/etc. requests. New things should earn their way into the attention field.
Anything you’d add? Got a felonious time burglar you’ve recently arrested?