Why multitasking might be the same thing as lying to yourself
July 23rd, 2025
You’re not doing two things at once. You’re just switching really fast – and doing both badly.
The human brain isn’t designed for multitasking. Yes, multitasking is mostly a myth.
We can walk and chew gum, sure – but writing an email while listening to a podcast, replying to a text, and pretending to be in a Zoom meeting? No.
Psychologists call this task switching, and it’s been shown to reduce productivity by up to 40%.
However, that’s not multitasking. That’s rather an advanced form of self-sabotage.
The problem is that we feel productive while doing it.
The brain releases little hits of dopamine every time we “jump” between tasks.
It feels good – but the outcome is worse.
Less depth. More mistakes. Zero clarity.
Quick tip:
Want to be sharper at work?
Batch your focus. 30 minutes on one thing. No tabs. No “quick check-ins.” Then you can pick up your phone.
The results might surprise you.
A colourful moment:
A manager once told me:
“I like to keep 17 tabs open – keeps my mind agile.”
I responded, “That’s not agility. That’s anxiety.”
He laughed nervously.
Then closed absolutely none of those 17 tabs.
See you next Wednesday.
//Thomas