Patrick's Programming Blog

Monotasking

Texting and Riding Bike
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  22. Work With People Who Inspire You
  23. Contact Form 7 & MailPoet Integration
  24. Monotasking
  25. Giving Back to The Community
  26. Adding Fuctionality to Lean Plugins
  27. Choose Stripe For a Payment Gateway
  28. A Dip Into Entrepreneurship
  29. Reward Yourself
  30. Blogging for Benjamin Plugin
  31. Blogging for Benjamin Wrap Up

I'm spending some time with family for the holidays this week and it's amazing how little we get done. I'm not even talking about work. I'm talking about regular every day things like finishing a card game. Everyone's playing on their smartphones, tablets, laptops, or otherwise multitasking. It doesn't seem like a single person is paying attention to what they're doing.

I love my family and I'm not saying this to rip on them. I think this is one of the big issues my generation will face. There's information coming in at us in every direction and it's hard to not want to try to consume it. One of the issues my generation has to face is trying to squeeze every drop of productivity out of each moment. I'm all for being productive but when you multitask you don't multiply your focus you fracture it. This is why I'm in favor of monotasking and completely finishing one task before moving onto the next one.

Pay Attention to What You're Doing

Yes I'm sure we all can play a game of Words With Friends while talking to someone else but what does it get you? What is the advantage? We think we can be more productive by multitasking but we don't think about the consequences. I like being able to have deep intellectual conversations and I also like to play a good game but you can't do both at the same time. If you try you end up with a mediocre conversation and a mediocre game.

Think about it. When you're walking down the street and eating do you focus just as much on the walking as when you're just walking? Do you focus on the food like when you're just eating? No of course not. You have moments where you focus on one or the other but you're always missing elements from both. You wont get the same experience as if you were to do the two separately.

Monotasking

I'm trying to work on monotasking instead of multitasking. It's honestly a work in progress but with each step towards monotasking I become much happier and more efficient. Here's a few things I do:

So far these little tricks have helped me quite a bit. I'm a big fan of monotasking and I'm sure as I get more into it I'll refine these.

Photo Credit: moriza via Compfight cc

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