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10_Tips_on_How_to_Focus
| 10 Tips on How to Focus
10 Proven Tips on How To Focus
#1: Exercise is Brainpower
Can't concentrate on the task at hand? Take a brisk walk around
the block. Even just five to ten minutes of moderate exercise
will give you the boost you need to work for a little while
longer.
#2: Thinking About the Outdoors?
Too nice outside? Can't wait to get out of the office? Take a
ten-minute break to go outside, sit in the sun and breathe in
the fresh air. When you return to your desk you should have the
spark you need to get through the next few hours.
#3: Can't Decide Where to Start?
Make a list of everything you want to do. This takes away the
stress and worry about forgetting something, and you may find
that your list isn't as long as you imagined it to be.
#4: Can't Decide What to do
Next?
Make a list of everything you have to or want to do. Delegate
or dump what you can and cross it off your list. Circle the
things you absolutely must get done, and check the things you
would like to get done. Pick one of your circled items and start
there. Once you've gone through the circled items you can hit
the checked items.
#5: Avoiding A Task You
Despise?
Some days mowing the lawn or working on a report just isn't
appealing. Set a timer and commit to working on your chosen task
wholeheartedly until the timer goes off. Depending on your task,
you may choose to set your timer for 15, 20, 30, 45, or 60
minutes. Come back to the task later for another round.
#6: Having a Hard Time Getting
Started?
As many people say, you can do anything for 15 minutes. Set a
timer for 15 minutes, and give your project your all. Once the
timer goes off, you may choose to stop. Sometimes you'll find
that just the momentum of getting started is enough to stick
with it until you're finished.
#7: Overwhelmed by Your To-Do
List?
Many people like to create weekend to-do lists, but at the
start of a lovely Saturday morning, the combination of a free
day and long list can be overwhelming. Assign an estimated time
value to each of your projects. Then number them randomly to
stagger the time spent on each item. As you go through your
list, 15 minutes of vacuuming becomes a nice break to 30 minutes
of changing the oil in your car, which is a nice change of pace
from your two-hour painting project. Before you know it, you're
done!
#8: Distracted by a Cluttered
Desk?
If you work well in a quiet, clean area, the visual noise
around your workspace could be draining you of focus. Keep your
desktop reserved for the task at hand. Clear your walls of notes
and signs, and keep only necessary work tools nearby. When you
don't have reminders of other impending deadlines and
responsibilities in front of your face, you can concentrate on
completing your current project.
#9: Are People Your Problem?
For many people, other people are the reason they cannot
concentrate. If you have a job where people are constantly
stopping by to talk to you, or work at home, make sure they know
when it is and is not appropriate to meet with you. Set aside
time just to work. Even 30 minutes of uninterrupted time will
help you accomplish a lot. Also remember - they invented voice
mail for a reason!
#10: Does Your Environment Compete with
Your Focus?
Sometimes we are put in situations where we have no choice
other than to force ourselves to concentrate in a noisy room or
focus on a project with multiple distractions running around. If
you find yourself in this situation, talk yourself through it.
You don't have to talk out loud - even the voices in your head
can be very powerful. Say every word you see, and tell yourself
about the project you're working on. Before you know it you
won't even notice what is going on around you.
##### Publisher's Box #####
©Kimberly Wells, Speron Inc, MyPrivateCoach d/b/a 2004.
www.MyPrivateCoach.com
Kimberly Wells is your Life and Goal Coach at
MyPrivateCoach. She
can be contacted at info@myprivatecoach.com
.
Get a taste of coaching FREE today, schedule your first free session!
This article may be published without the consent of the
author so long as the publisher's box is included in the
post.
##### End Publisher's Box #####
About the author:
A trained coach based out of Wisconsin, Kimberly is the Goal and
Time Management Coach at http://www.MyPrivatecoach.com.
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