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Tips for Improving Focus

Once I actually sit down at my desk, I often have a hard time getting anything done. I’ll clean my desk, browse the New York Times, skim the Twitter headlines, respond to messages on my phone, organize my email, make a to-do list, alphabetize my files, and on and on. I pretend that I’m being productive; but in reality, I’m just avoiding my work.

, here’s my handy guide for staying focused while working.

Before You Sit Down to Work

Try these one day prior to your workday, even the night before.

  • Write down your three most important tasks (MITs) for the day.
    • Use an old-fashioned post-it and pen.
  • Break everything down into manageable tasks.
    • Again, use a post-it and pen to make a hierarchy of concrete and manageable tasks. For example: MIT #1: Write a resume.
      • Find and read articles on best practices for resume building
      • Write down components of my resume: education, experience, skills
      • Create rough draft
  • Write an hour-by-hour task list for the day and include time for breaks or administrative tasks (e.g., checking your email or getting a flu shot).
  • Use or other similar apps to block access to Facebook, Reddit, and YouTube and adjust according to your addiction status.

When You Sit Down to Work

  • Have a pen and blank post-it next to you to write down any other “to-do” tasks that come to your mind.
  • Chew on gum or suck on a cough drop or other hard candy. I heard once that there was scientific research saying that .
  • Turn off your phone, or put it on airplane mode, or put it in another room. Don’t even let it vibrate. Make it completely silent.
  • Close your email. Yes, close it; no one is going to die if it takes you two-plus hours to respond to their email.
  • Shut down your chat windows. That means Skype, Facebook, iMessage and Gchat. The messages will still be there when you get back, I promise.
  • Write down all the endless chatter happening in your brain. Keep a document on your desktop titled, “distractions.” When you find yourself thinking about your ex-boyfriend, or how much you hate your neighbor, or whatever other drama is happening in your life, open that doc and get it all down. Then, get back to work.
  • Tell yourself, “I’m just going to work for five minutes and then I’ll take a break.”
    This tricks your brain, every single time, into working much longer.

While You’re Working

  • Turn your timer on.
  • Break up your work into 25-minute chunks with 5-minute breaks or 50-minute chunks with 10-minute breaks ().
  • Turn on music. I listen to classical or instrumental music with no lyrics.

If You Find Yourself Getting Distracted

  • Take a few deep breaths and tell yourself something motivational like "you got this."
  • Focus on a motivational image or think about obtaining something you desire: imagine yourself on the day you graduate with your PhD, or the day you pass your comps— anything that will motivate you to get back to work.
  • Close your eyes and imagine myself succeeding in what you are doing.
  • Think of a reward when you finish your task, like watching a favorite episode of your favorite show or treating yourself to something decadent like a pumpkin spice latte from Starbucks.

Sarah Tynen was the graduate program manager at the Graduate School. She completed her PhD at Boulder in geography in May 2019.