5 min listen
#43: How to Avoid Distraction and Manage Attention to Write
#43: How to Avoid Distraction and Manage Attention to Write
ratings:
Length:
6 minutes
Released:
Mar 23, 2016
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Show Notes
Episode #43: How to Avoid Distraction and Manage Attention to Write
In this episode, I take both a macro and micro view of attention, focus, and distraction.
At the macro level, I suggest that formulating a general plan of where you’d like to go as a writer will make it easier to focus your attention on how a given activity fits into the big picture (and you can more easily resist Shiny Object Syndrome).
At the micro level, we can focus our attention by minimizing everyday, moment-by-moment distractions. Clear your desk. Try the Pomodoro technique. When you launch your writing session, silence phone notifications, close the browser. You can even try using the "focus" view in Word to minimize visual distractions on the screen.
In addition, we can learn to become "meta-aware," noticing when our mind is wandering. When we increase meta-awareness, we can learn to nudge our mind back to the task at hand by telling ourselves, “Okay, I’m writing now. So, quiet. I’m trying to concentrate."
Listen for the full podcast.
Lots of Resources:
#42: Manage Your Energy So You Can Write
#41: 5 Steps to Find Time for Writing
#40: Take Charge of Your Writing Space, Tasks, and Projects
#39: Manage Your Writing Space to Be a More Productive Writer
#38: Manage Your Writing Space, Time, Energy, and Attention
Novelty and the Brain: Why New Things Make Us Feel So Good
Concentrate! How to Tame a Wandering Mind
Write in the Middle: Yes, You Can Maximize Distraction-Free Writing
Write in the Middle of Everyday Distractions: 7 Strategies for Getting Back on Track
Productivity 101: A Primer to the Pomodoro Technique
* * *
You can subscribe with iTunes, where I'd love to have you subscribe, rate, and leave a review.
The podcast is also available Stitcher, and you should be able to search for and find "Ann Kroeker, Writing Coach" in any podcast player.
Image by Ann Kroeker.
Episode #43: How to Avoid Distraction and Manage Attention to Write
In this episode, I take both a macro and micro view of attention, focus, and distraction.
At the macro level, I suggest that formulating a general plan of where you’d like to go as a writer will make it easier to focus your attention on how a given activity fits into the big picture (and you can more easily resist Shiny Object Syndrome).
At the micro level, we can focus our attention by minimizing everyday, moment-by-moment distractions. Clear your desk. Try the Pomodoro technique. When you launch your writing session, silence phone notifications, close the browser. You can even try using the "focus" view in Word to minimize visual distractions on the screen.
In addition, we can learn to become "meta-aware," noticing when our mind is wandering. When we increase meta-awareness, we can learn to nudge our mind back to the task at hand by telling ourselves, “Okay, I’m writing now. So, quiet. I’m trying to concentrate."
Listen for the full podcast.
Lots of Resources:
#42: Manage Your Energy So You Can Write
#41: 5 Steps to Find Time for Writing
#40: Take Charge of Your Writing Space, Tasks, and Projects
#39: Manage Your Writing Space to Be a More Productive Writer
#38: Manage Your Writing Space, Time, Energy, and Attention
Novelty and the Brain: Why New Things Make Us Feel So Good
Concentrate! How to Tame a Wandering Mind
Write in the Middle: Yes, You Can Maximize Distraction-Free Writing
Write in the Middle of Everyday Distractions: 7 Strategies for Getting Back on Track
Productivity 101: A Primer to the Pomodoro Technique
* * *
You can subscribe with iTunes, where I'd love to have you subscribe, rate, and leave a review.
The podcast is also available Stitcher, and you should be able to search for and find "Ann Kroeker, Writing Coach" in any podcast player.
Image by Ann Kroeker.
Released:
Mar 23, 2016
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
#25: Stuck in the Middle: Show Notes Summary: Hundreds of thousands of writers are in the middle of National Novel Writing Month, or what is affectionately known as NaNoWriMo—where writers have signed up with the goal of completing a novel draft of 50,000 words. by Ann Kroeker, Writing Coach