Of interest to those of us interested in tai chi and
focus... Tom
The Art of Focus
David Brooks
New York Times
6/2/14
Like everyone else, I am losing the attention war. I
toggle over to my emails when I should be working. I text when I should be
paying attention to the people in front of me. I spend hours looking at mildly
diverting stuff on YouTube. (“Look, there’s a bunch of guys who can play
‘Billie Jean’ on beer bottles!”)
And, like everyone else, I’ve nodded along with the
prohibition sermons imploring me to limit my information diet. Stop
multitasking! Turn off the devices at least once a week!
And, like everyone else, these sermons have had no
effect. Many of us lead lives of distraction, unable to focus on what we know
we should focus on. According to a survey reported in an Op-Ed article on Sunday in The Times by Tony
Schwartz and Christine Porath, 66 percent of workers aren’t able to focus on
one thing at a time. Seventy percent of employees don’t have regular time for
creative or strategic thinking while at work.
Since the prohibition sermons don’t work, I wonder if we
might be able to copy some of the techniques used by the creatures who are
phenomenally good at learning things: children.
I recently stumbled across an interview in The Paris Review with Adam
Phillips, who was a child psychologist for many years. First, Phillips says, in
order to pursue their intellectual adventures, children need a secure social
base:
“There’s something deeply important about the early
experience of being in the presence of somebody without being impinged upon by
their demands, and without them needing you to make a demand on them. And that
this creates a space internally into which one can be absorbed. In order to be
absorbed one has to feel sufficiently safe, as though there is some shield, or
somebody guarding you against dangers such that you can ‘forget yourself’ and
absorb yourself, in a book, say.”
Second, before they can throw themselves into their obsessions,
children are propelled by desires so powerful that they can be frightening.
“One of the things that is interesting about children is how much appetite they
have,” Phillips observes. “How much appetite they have — but also how
conflicted they can be about their appetites. Anybody who’s got young children
... will remember that children are incredibly picky about their food. ...
“One of the things it means is there’s something very
frightening about one’s appetite. So that one is trying to contain a voraciousness
in a very specific, limited, narrowed way. ... .An appetite is fearful because
it connects you with the world in very unpredictable ways. ... Everybody is
dealing with how much of their own alivenesss they can bear and how much they
need to anesthetize themselves.”
Third, children are not burdened by excessive
self-consciousness: “As young children, we listen to adults talking before we
understand what they’re saying. And that’s, after all, where we start — we
start in a position of not getting it.” Children are used to living an
emotional richness that can’t be captured in words. They don’t worry about
trying to organize their lives into neat little narratives. Their experience of
life is more direct because they spend less time on interfering thoughts about
themselves.
The lesson from childhood, then, is that if you want to
win the war for attention, don’t try to say “no” to the trivial distractions
you find on the information smorgasbord; try to say “yes” to the subject that
arouses a terrifying longing, and let the terrifying longing crowd out
everything else.
The way to discover a terrifying longing is to liberate
yourself from the self-censoring labels you began to tell yourself over the
course of your mis-education. These formulas are stultifying, Phillips argues:
“You can only recover your appetite, and appetites, if you can allow yourself
to be unknown to yourself. Because the point of knowing oneself is to contain
one’s anxieties about appetite.”
Thus: Focus on the external objects of fascination, not
on who you think you are. Find people with overlapping obsessions. Don’t
structure your encounters with them the way people do today, through
brainstorming sessions (those don’t work) or through conferences with
projection screens.
Instead look at the way children learn in groups. They
make discoveries alone, but bring their treasures to the group. Then the group
crowds around and hashes it out. In conversation, conflict, confusion and
uncertainty can be metabolized and digested through somebody else. If the group
sets a specific problem for itself, and then sets a tight deadline to come up
with answers, the free digression of conversation will provide occasions in
which people are surprised by their own minds.
The information universe tempts you with mildly pleasant
but ultimately numbing diversions. The only way to stay fully alive is to dive
down to your obsessions six fathoms deep. Down there it’s possible to make
progress toward fulfilling your terrifying longing, which is the experience
that produces the joy.
`
No comments:
Post a Comment