Article: The Magic of Doing One Thing at a Time

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The Magic of Doing One Thing at a Time

Why is it that between 25% and 50% of people report feeling overwhelmed or burned out at work?

It's not just the number of hours we're working, but also the fact that we spend too many continuous hours juggling too many things at the same time.

What we've lost, above all, are stopping points, finish lines and boundaries. Technology has blurred them beyond recognition. Wherever we go, our work follows us, on our digital devices, ever insistent and intrusive. It's like an itch we can't resist scratching, even though scratching invariably makes it worse.

Tell the truth: Do you answer email during conference calls (and sometimes even during calls with one other person)? Do you bring your laptop to meetings and then pretend you're taking notes while you surf the net? Do you eat lunch at your desk? Do you make calls while you're driving, and even send the occasional text, even though you know you shouldn't?

The biggest cost — assuming you don't crash — is to your productivity. In part, that's a simple consequence of splitting your attention, so that you're partially engaged in multiple activities but rarely fully engaged in any one. In part, it's because when you switch away from a primary task to do something else, you're increasing the time it takes to finish that task by an average of 25 per cent.

But most insidiously, it's because if you're always doing something, you're relentlessly burning down your available reservoir of energy over the course of every day, so you have less available with every passing hour.

I know this from my own experience. I get two to three times as much writing accomplished when I focus without interruption for a designated period of time and then take a real break, away from my desk. The best way for an organization to fuel higher productivity and more innovative thinking is to strongly encourage finite periods of absorbed focus, as well as shorter periods of real renewal.

If you're a manager, here are three policies worth promoting:

1. Maintain meeting discipline. Schedule meetings for 45 minutes, rather than an hour or longer, so participants can stay focused, take time afterward to reflect on what's been discussed, and recover before the next obligation. Start all meetings at a precise time, end at a precise time, and insist that all digital devices be turned off throughout the meeting.

2. Stop demanding or expecting instant responsiveness at every moment of the day. It forces your people into reactive mode, fractures their attention, and makes it difficult for them to sustain attention on their priorities. Let them turn off their email at certain times. If it's urgent, you can call them — but that won't happen very often.

3. Encourage renewal. Create at least one time during the day when you encourage your people to stop working and take a break. Offer a midafternoon class in yoga, or meditation, organize a group walk or workout, or consider creating a renewal room where people can relax, or take a nap.

It's also up to individuals to set their own boundaries. Consider these three behaviors for yourself:

1. Do the most important thing first in the morning, preferably without interruption, for 60 to 90 minutes, with a clear start and stop time. If possible, work in a private space during this period, or with sound-reducing earphones. Finally, resist every impulse to distraction, knowing that you have a designated stopping point. The more absorbed you can get, the more productive you'll be. When you're done, take at least a few minutes to renew.

2. Establish regular, scheduled times to think more long term, creatively, or strategically. If you don't, you'll constantly succumb to the tyranny of the urgent. Also, find a different environment in which to do this activity — preferably one that's relaxed and conducive to open-ended thinking.

3. Take real and regular vacations. Real means that when you're off, you're truly disconnecting from work. Regular means several times a year if possible, even if some are only two or three days added to a weekend. The research strongly suggests that you'll be far healthier if you take all of your vacation time, and more productive overall.

A single principle lies at the heart of all these suggestions. When you're engaged at work, fully engage, for defined periods of time. When you're renewing, truly renew. Make waves. Stop living your life in the gray zone.
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blogs.hbr.org/schwartz/2012/03/the-magic-of-doing-one-thing-a.html

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Thanks Abu_Adel for the dedication to me :)

Being a great admirer of Apple innovations carried out by R.I.P Steve Jobs, I was aware of the new even before this was concluded :)

There are solid reasons for my deep inspiration (which is rather emotional). Go through the following story, it will explain what point I'm trying to make:
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Written by: Mohammed Taher

I spent a total of ~4 months in the hospital last year. 3 weeks in August, and about 3 months from mid-October till mid-January. It definitely was a straining experience; a life-changing one. It almost felt as if I'm never going to check out. What I had back then is not important; it's how I got through it all. I slept for an average of 5 noncontinuous hours a day. That leaves me with 19 hours. 19 hours, every day, for 3 months. Take a second to digest this, then answer yourself: how the hell am I going to get through that?

“Just get through this thing”, you might say. And in retrospect, it doesn't seem as frightening; it's all a blur. Only I wish it was as simple as mere stating it.

Visiting hours were constrained to 4 a day, and so it was the iPhone that made it all bearable. This is not a hyperbole; not an attempt to glorify a situation. Rather, it was (and still is) understated, how much that device got me through this thing. People who were following me on Twitter back then might remember my rapid nature of tweeting. Tweeting everything! It was as if having a couple hundred imaginary friends (except they weren't so). I sent a tweet before my 1st surgery, and a tweet after. I tweeted about my situation, about my awful nurses, about missing Eid; I pretty much took a magnifying glass and laid it right on top of my room.

Having Twitter was amazing, but it didn't stop at that. The iTunes Store was my real form of escapism – apps, games, films, music; I got so engrossed within this realm that it got me, more often than not, to shift my attention from my condition. If Morphine numbed my physical pain, the iTunes Store numbed my psychological one. A game of “Canabalt”, a quick round of tech news in “Reeder”, improving my kaleidoscopic sense in “Instagram”; I was basically shifting gears continuously. My mind became occupied. I am no longer bored nor alone. I constructed my first piece of music there, in the hospital, on my iPad. I watched the entire “The Walking Dead” series on my bed. I watched dozens of films as well, as renting films was effectively cheap and therefore keeps you coming back. Every night was a movie night. Every day was a gaming day. It certainly was thrilling; to be able to bear that much in this small little miraculous device.

There is normal usage, and there is more. My iPhone was 24/7 on charge. I even use it when going to the bathroom. It was my HAL; my guiding light in what seemed to be an eternal abyss. You think it's cheesy, but that's essentially what was happening: I was chained to my bed. One funny incident, I remember, is when I came out of my 2nd surgery. I was determined to finish a book, and my mother had brought me some, but the simple act of holding a book was a challenge in itself, let alone going through pages; any extra weight had me mourning my abdominal pain. So I got to the iBooks Store, right from my iPhone, and bought a book. Holding an iPhone in one hand is certainly a much more manageable task, and flicking through pages was as easy as ever, with just a single touch. A few days passed by and I got halfway through the book when my doctor delivered me the good news: you're going out today.

Both the iPhone & iPad made me bear the pain of being alone. There is solitude, and there is loneliness, and those devices made sure I wasn't dipped in the latter as much.

That's just one story, of one person, who was affected deeply & on a personal level by the inventions of Steve Jobs. You want statistics & achievements? Buy his autobiography. I have always been a fan of good design and of Apple, but it is in 2010 that I developed an attachment to this company. We're supposed to try and be real. Steve's inventions changed the course of actions of my days. It changed me. And that is real.



Ref: http://www.saudimac.com/2011/10/in-reme … teve-jobs/