Why multitasking might be the same thing as lying to yourself
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
The red profile
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