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I will
spend the first four sharpening the axe.” Whether we’re planning a home
renovation project, allocating our team’s budget, or designing a research study, the
approach we take to the task at hand matters. The more scatterfocus time we schedule
as we’re putting together a plan, the more time we’ll save later.
The brain needs a few minutes to switch between hyperfocus and scatterfocus.
Therefore, taking scatterfocus breaks that are at least fifteen minutes long will yield
better results than trying to take advantage of tiny chunks of time throughout the day.
But even brief breaks will help you become more
creative, for while they may not leave
sufficient time to piece together complex eureka insights, they’ll
definitely enable you to
set intentions for what to do next, rest, and capture the open loops at the top of your
mind. All three flavors of scatterfocus
—habitual, capture, and problem-crunching—work
in both small and large periods of time, though they’ll provide you with more benefits at
longer durations.
As well as entering scatterfocus mode on work breaks, there are countless other
opportunities to apply scatterfocus during the day:
Disconnect from the internet between 8:00 p.m. and 8:00 a.m.
Notice when you finish a task, and use that as a cue to scatter your
attention
for a bit.
Buy a cheap alarm clock so you’re not immediately distracted by your phone
when you wake up.
Walk to get a coffee carrying only a notepad.
As a challenge to yourself, leave your phone at home for an entire day.
Take an extra-long shower.
Make yourself bored for five minutes and notice what thoughts run through
your head.
Tame distractions and simplify your environment to make sure
your attention
doesn’t overflow the next time you do a creative hobby.
Cook with music playing instead of watching something entertaining.
Go for a nature walk.
Visit an art gallery.
Work out without music or a podcast.
Objectively speaking, scatterfocus might seem fairly unproductive. You’re on a bus
staring out the window. You’re walking through nature or jogging without headphones.
You’re in a waiting room writing in a notepad instead of tapping on your phone. Though
you don’t look busy, your mind certainly is.
Scatterfocus is the most creative mode of your brain. Just as with hyperfocus, it’s
worth spending as much time as you possibly can practicing it.