When people say “I get distracted easily,” what they’re really saying is, “I receive less of the absolute miracle that is “focus” than other people.” Because when we consider the 10 million bytes of imagery data that the eyes give the brain every second or the 6,000 spontaneous thoughts we have each day, it truly seems like a miracle we can focus on anything at all.

As it turns out, far from being a miracle, focus can actually be trained and developed, just like a human muscle after months of pumping iron.

That is according to a professor of behavioral neuroscience named Dr. Amishi Jha, who has written a book called Peak Mind: Find Your Focus, Own Your Attention.

Her research shows that when people in high-demand jobs like soldiers, elite athletes, or emergency personnel invest 12 minutes a day for four-weeks doing simple mindfulness exercises, many aspects of cognitive and emotional health—including attention—are improved.

“The first step to better focus is accepting a key truth: you cannot just decide to have unfettered attention,” says Jha in a book review piece for The Guardian.

A lot of western ideas about mindfulness are drawn from eastern religious mediation practices. Some Buddhist meditations, for example, involve focusing on nothing—the supreme emptiness that pervades all other things, while Zen mediation focuses on thinking about nothing, but being aware of all things happening around you. Some Zen practitioners will even keep their eyes open.

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That’s not the kind of thing most people are able, or willing, to do. Yet Jha explains that attention can be trained through simple exercises.

Specifically, they involve daily steps that “exercise the brain in ways that it is prone to being weakened,” such as when we are brushing our teeth and immediately turn our attention to thinking about other things. One can develop the mental muscle to observe the present, instead of becoming lost in our monkey minds.

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Jha’s book contains a lot of brain workouts, all centered around this sort of wisdom.

1: Paying attention to your breath and where in your body you feel it passing the most. Use your focus like a flashlight (a physical challenge of hers).

2: Don’t think of these exercises as peaceful reflection, or time to say “Om,” but rather a rigorous mental workout.

3: Don’t think of being calm, and instead try to imagine the goal of being alone in the middle of a four way intersection, watching people (your thoughts) pass along the crosswalks under each set of lights.

4: As with the breathing focus, spend three minutes a day focusing on the sensation of doing exactly what it is you are doing. If that’s showering, focus on that experience alone.

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2 COMMENTS

  1. I’ve done this since afe 11 (I’m 80). So it’s called “meditation?” Good to know — I thought “meditation” involved thinking. This is “not thinking.” Seems odd to frame it as “exercise.”

    I’ve found the DaodeJing most helpful.

  2. I have been raised in a family that have done these practices or many similar things like this our whole lives.
    Yes, it DOES work & it’s so simple.
    All of these things are as close as our breath.
    We just have to be guided to it.
    Since it’s the mind’s “job” to create thoughts,…. watching the breath slowing moving in & out, noticing where the breath stops while it changes direction, repeating OM, —- all these things help the mind & being focus.
    Thank you for posting this.
    It’s a lovely blessing to see this on Thanksgiving!

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