An attention problem, not a time problem
You’re not short on hours. You’re leaking attention.
Use when — you end every day busy, behind, and unable to say what you actually did.
Use when — you end every day busy, behind, and unable to say what you actually did.
Interruptions steal less time than you think — you speed up to compensate and pay in stress and shallower thinking instead. And about half of them, you start yourself. The fix isn’t a better calendar; it’s a defended attention supply.
Count interruptions before you count hours — and kill the self-inflicted half first.
Buying another productivity app while the phone sits face-up next to your keyboard.
✓Done when — One day’s interruptions tallied, split into “them” vs “me” — with the “me” column targeted for tomorrow.
Gloria Mark et al., “The Cost of Interrupted Work” (CHI 2008) — faster, but more stress; ~half are self-interruptions.