Life Kit - Too many goals and too little time? How to focus your attention
Episode Date: March 13, 2025Time is precious and we never seem to have enough of it. We have to work, feed ourselves, clean our homes, take care of kids or family members, catch up with friends, sleep ... and on top of that, the...re are endless hobbies or pursuits we'd want to do if only we had more hours in the week. Is it any wonder we feel like we're constantly scrambling? This episode, how to carve out time for that passion project. Life Kit experts share tips on how we can be intentional about our attention.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hey everybody, it's Mariel. Lately I've been loving the idea of becoming a Renaissance
woman. You know, a Jill of all trades. The gal who can do it all. Because I have a lot
of interests. I like to read fantasy and adventure novels, play around with fashion and colorful makeup.
I have many spiritual pursuits.
I just took a woodworking class,
went roller skating and loved it.
I enjoy rock climbing and yoga and music.
I'm planning to learn the drums
and I also have a ukulele sitting in my closet
waiting for me to pick it up.
I'd love to get back into tap dancing.
Oh, there's sewing too.
Got a sewing machine for Christmas and I just turned it on this week.
Okay, I can see how my plate might be a little too full.
Truth is, we can only spread our attention so thin.
When you get to the end of your life, the sum total of all the things you paid attention
to will have been your life.
If there are some friendships there that you never actually paid any attention to, well,
you didn't really have those friendships, right?
I mean, if there was an interest that you had that you never actually spent any attention
pursuing, well, you didn't really have that interest.
So it really matters what we're paying attention to because it just adds up to a life.
This is Oliver Berkman. He's the author of 4000 Weeks, Time Management for Mortals. The
book is about how to manage the limited time we have on earth, which if you live to 80
comes out to about 4000 weeks.
And even if you're incredibly lucky in terms of your lifespan, it's still going to be a
very hard limit. And this has lots of ramifications for how we think about using our daily time that I think we don't pay enough attention to.
On this episode of LifeKit, how to focus on the things you're actually excited about and
the activities and pursuits that align with your values. This will likely mean putting
some things on the shelf for now and clawing back your attention from social media and all the bright and shiny things that happened inside your phone.
Oliver and other LifeKit experts are going to share tips on how we can be intentional
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I think most of us feel scattered a lot of the time. We have our jobs, we have to feed ourselves,
we need to clean our apartments or houses,
take care of our kids or family members,
catch up with friends, work on creative projects.
Is it any wonder we feel like we're constantly failing at everything on our to-do list? And yeah, there are some basic needs that we have to meet,
but beyond those, takeaway one is to pick one main goal at a time and lock in. So
maybe you want to finish writing a book or actually learn how to use that sewing
machine if you're having trouble choosing from your list of interests.
Karima Batts has some advice for you.
She's a rock climber who founded the Adaptive Climbing Group,
a climbing program for people with disabilities.
Rock climbing was not on her radar until she went through a difficult transition in her life.
She had undergone treatment for cancer that required her leg below the knee to be amputated,
and she was trying to accept those changes.
Part of that journey meant finding new ways of moving and feeling good in her body. leg below the knee to be amputated, and she was trying to accept those changes.
Part of that journey meant finding new ways of moving and feeling good in her body.
And I purposely chose the rock climbing because I had literally never done it before.
So Karima's advice for picking a hobby, interest, or a new project is to start with a wide lens.
Pick three things that seem interesting, and then pick two things that you think you would
never like.
You might look for ideas online, ask your friends what sorts of activities they've
liked doing recently, or find a list of creative workshops in your area.
You can try out a one-time class to gauge how interested you actually are in something.
And then as you're narrowing it down, consider your values at this moment, your needs, and
what it feels like is lacking in your life.
You might also cross some things off for logistical reasons, right?
The cost, the commuting distance, the amount of time you'd need to commit.
Whatever you land on, get ready to devote regular attention to this pursuit.
And that means...
Choosing in advance what to fail at.
I think that is a lovely idea that I got originally
from the author John Acuff.
Except right now that something in your life
is probably gonna slip through the cracks
as you pursue this goal or interest.
If you're spending a ton of time doing activities
that'll help you meet new people, for instance,
you're not gonna be at home as much.
You might have to be okay with a messy house
or with eating out more.
Or if you're focused on tap dancing,
you might not also have time for rock climbing every week.
Better to decide now what you do want to fail at
than discover sometime down the road
that you didn't do anything
because you were trying to do it all.
When you realize that, in fact,
you were gonna have to fail at something,
you decide it in advance.
It's a lot more pleasant
because you don't put the effort in the first place.
You don't have to then keep beating yourself up for not doing something that humans can't do.
Concentrating on one goal at a time means you'll probably finish it more quickly.
When you do pour into your passion,
it can give back to you as much as you've given to it.
When Karima started climbing,
she got her independence back and she found a new community.
You know, no one's doing it for you.
You know, no one's giving you an extra help in a way.
It's all you.
And I think especially as a person with a disability, that feeling I was struggling
with, which I find a lot of people with disabilities tend to struggle with is about when you have
a lot of able-bodied people around you, you know, are you doing it yourself, you know, who's helping you.
That sense of independence is super important to us and being self-sufficient and I feel
like climbing does that but at the same time allows to bring people together.
Okay, I want to tell you about someone else's goal now.
Her name is Leah Schaefer and she's been working on a novel about vampires.
She goes to his hill country home and they sort of trade blood for a safe place for a little while.
And then some other vampires come in.
A few years ago, Leah had managed to write one draft of this book. But in the past year?
I've rewritten this three times, I think maybe maybe three and a half. And I wrote two more books.
Terrible books, but each better than the last her progress took off when she met Jamie her accountability partner
He's an author too and they met online. I was on tik-tok and just some random dude was like does anybody want to be?
Accountability buddies with me and I was like, I don't even know what that is
but sure I'll try it and then we, I think that same week on Zoom,
and we have been meeting every week,
every Friday at nine o'clock for over a year now.
He tells her his goals for the week and she tells him hers.
Here's an example from the week we interviewed her.
When we meet on Friday, I am supposed to have gone
through my first 10 chapters in my novel for revisions
and recorded five TikToks.
And he's doing, you know, he'll do some marketing, book marketing,
because he's got some books out.
He'll do some writing goals.
Leah has done more work on this novel in the past year than ever before.
I definitely don't think I would have gotten the work done this last year
if I hadn't had Jamie as my buddy and met every week.
I would sit there in our Zoom meetings and think,
I should, quote unquote, should be able to do this alone.
But there is some kind of, like, there's some magic in it.
Like, it's, I highly recommend it.
So our takeaway too is to find focus in community.
Humans are social animals.
People have been working in groups from the beginning of times.
We do things with others and when others are not around, they are in our mind.
Ayelet Fishback is a professor of behavioral science and marketing at the University of
Chicago Booth School of Business.
One finding from her research is that in the presence of other people, our actions
feel more meaningful to us.
And that's true even if they're strangers.
We had people in China playing badminton as part of some event.
And when there were more people in the audience, they felt that they either contributed more
to the win or contributed more to the loss, but that what they did mattered.
If you're struggling to make the time for one of your goals or to stick to it, to keep practicing,
it could help to team up with a person or a group of people willing to carve out space and focus together.
The classic example of this is a running buddy or a running group.
But there are so many other versions of this too. Book club, drummer circle.
I mean, there's a group in Brooklyn
that meets once a month to carve wooden spoons.
I went to their last meetup.
It was great.
What I'm saying is, you can find your people.
Our next takeaway, takeaway three,
is to tap into the power of routine.
Cynthia Pong is the founder and CEO of Embrace Change,
a career coaching firm focused on women of color.
She says another way to keep moving toward our goals
is to create defaults in our lives.
Most of us grew up through some sort of school system
where there's a lot of structure
and you have to do things on a certain timeline
within this container, turn things in,
someone else is grading, like
there's that entire dynamic and so it becomes really ingrained.
Think about the routines you have that make goals easier for you. Having healthy teeth
likely doesn't need to be a goal if you brush your teeth and floss regularly. Or if you
get in the routine of biking to work, you'll advance in your fitness goals without needing
to spend extra brain power thinking about the how. We've got a thousand reasons why we shouldn't do the thing. But if it's like a standing
situation and you just get into that routine, it will just become reflexive.
And reflexive is the operative word here. Routines help take some of the mental load
off of us by making our behaviors automatic.
So we've been talking about strategies to hold ourselves accountable to a goal.
Another way to come at this takeaway for is to improve your memory.
You likely won't make a lot of progress in your chosen skill or interest. If your memory is scattered across a bunch of different things and you're not
remembering what you learned the last time you practiced this skill. Luckily you can improve your memory. To
understand how we do that we're gonna walk you through how a memory gets made
and you're gonna hear from Lisa Genova a neuroscientist and author of the book
Remember the Science of Memory and the Art of Forgetting. First your brain takes
in all the sights, the sounds, the smells, the tastes, the meaning,
the emotion, the language of what you perceived and paid attention to, and translates all
of that into neurological language.
Then your brain weaves all of that information together.
The important part here is that memories are multi-sensory, and the more senses involved
in a memory, the stronger it becomes. Also at a future date if you activate your senses
in the same way the other details of a memory can come flooding back. This is
something we can use to our advantage. Let's say you're trying to learn
Spanish or get good at the tuba and you're sitting down to practice. Form a
habit where you light a candle or spray a certain essential oil into the air or put a heating pad in your lap,
something that stimulates your senses.
And then the next time you go to practice, do the same thing.
So if I'm in the same physiological, emotional state, if I have the same kind of cues,
oh there was the scent, there was the sound, if I was listening to Dua Lipa,
and then like if I have a chance to like listen to Dua Lipa while
I take the test, it might help me remember those vocabulary words.
Okay, takeaway five is to eliminate distractions or at least the ones that aren't nourishing
you.
If you're paying attention to things that on some level you don't want to be paying
attention to, you're just giving away the only precious thing you have,
right, which is the time of your life.
I know Oliver's right, but it's really hard to resist the pull of things like social media.
I don't have accounts on most social media platforms.
I do have a private Instagram, but I don't even keep the app on my phone.
I only look at it on the browser.
Even then, you know, one second I'm watching a video
my friend sent and 20 minutes later,
I'm down a rabbit hole looking at another video
about the new purple wiggle and how hot he is.
He really is though.
That hole I get sucked into, that we all get sucked into,
not only distracts me from my goals,
but it leaves me feeling stressed and guilty.
This happened to me when I had around 12 to 13 hours of connected devices and smart devices use.
I felt stressed. I felt anxious in a way that I hadn't. And that was difficult.
Jose Briones is the author of the book Low Tech Life, a guide to mindful digital minimalism.
Right after college, Jose found that his life had been overtaken by screens, and he was
spending all of his time passively.
He decided to do something drastic.
He traded in his smartphone for a boring phone.
You know, a basic phone without a ton of apps or social media.
So what I have done since I switched to a more basic phone is I go for walks.
Every two to three hours, I have a dog that is quite
active and he helps me in this. So I go on a walk with my dog in the neighborhood and
I just take that time to recompose, think about what's just happening in my life and
processing all of the different aspects of it.
The time that Jose would have spent on his phone is still unstructured alone time.
That hasn't changed.
He's just more mindful during it.
By the way, the end game with cutting out distractions isn't to just put all that time
towards work.
It's to be intentional about where your time goes so your rest feels more like rest and
so you're rejuvenated and excited for the time you are working towards something.
You might slowly find yourself reclaiming
interests that you've abandoned over the years. I've been able to recover a lot of those habits
that I used to have in university. Reading books, just taking time, better sleep, exercising,
walking, just going out and thinking about my day and having better relationships. And I was able to, at the same time, start a hobby
to help people find what's the best path for them.
So I guess I gained a lot of skills
and a lot of different things during this time period
that have made my life more satisfying.
That brings me to one final point.
The quest for peak performance and peak focus
can, if we're not careful, block us from experiencing life.
It's easy to lose a sense of an experience which is in itself wondrous by demanding that the
experience produce outcome. That's Dr. Stuart Brown. He's a psychiatrist and founder of the
National Institute for Play. And he says when you're doing something
simply for the end result, you lose joy in the process.
Hyper-focusing on productivity can also get in the way
of us finding new activities that we might love.
So while you're letting yourself focus on one main goal,
also allow yourself time to try new things
and be bad at them.
Or to just sit in silence.
The next big project can wait.
Remember, you can't do it all.
Not in this lifetime.
But Oliver says there's beauty in that.
Because in accepting our limitations, we can really start to make the most of our time.
I think there's a lot of very meaningful projects and activities both in personal life
and in work, in activism, in all sorts of domains where it's very useful to think,
what if I judge the value of this task not by whether I'm going to see the world saved from climate chaos, or whether my parenting
ended up creating wonderfully successful human beings, or whether this organization
finally manages to bring justice to this corner of the world, or something like that, but
just see it as valuable as a part of a very long chain that has, you know, people who've
been there centuries before you, and of people who've been there centuries before you
and of people who'll be there centuries after you
and just sort of focus on what you can do
in the little stretch of time that you have.
All right, it's time for a recap.
Takeaway one is to focus on one goal at a time
and choose the things you're willing to fail at.
Take away two, find a community or a buddy
to help keep you accountable.
Take away three, build routines
so you have more energy to focus
on the things you're excited about.
Take away four, improve your memory
with sensory cues like scents and sounds.
Take away five, eliminate the distractions
that are not nourishing you.
And then before you move on to your next pursuit,
take a break, be aimless, do some things
just because you feel like it.
They might lead you to another activity
that you're gonna love.
For more LifeKit, check out our other episodes.
We've got one on how to move more
and another on how to boost your mood.
You can find those at npr.org slash life kit.
And if you love life kit and want even more, subscribe to our newsletter at npr.org slash
life kit newsletter.
Also we love hearing from you.
So if you have episode ideas or feedback you want to share, email us at life kit at npr.org.
This episode of life kit was produced by Margaret Serino.
Our visuals editor is Beck Harlan and our digital editor is Malika Gareeb.
Meghan Kane is our supervising editor and Beth Donovan is our executive producer.
Our production team also includes Andy Tagel, Claire Marie Schneider, Sam Yella Horst-Kessler
and Sylvie Douglas.
Engineering support comes from Patrick Murray.
I'm Mariel Segarra.
Thanks for listening. Hi, it's Terri Griswold. I'm a producer for Life Kit. I'm Mariel Cigarra. Thanks for listening.
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He was hilarious and introspective in the interview, and it was a wild ride. You can
hear a special extended version of this interview on the Fresh Air podcast from NPR and WHYY.
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