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\nPS. I'll be doing an Ask Me Anything bonus episode in the next few weeks; if you've got something you'd like me to answer / tackle, email me steph@stephclarke.com
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\nAbout the\xa0book
\nAll over the world, our ability to pay attention is collapsing. In the US, college students now focus on one task for only 65 seconds, and office workers on average manage only three minutes. New York Times best-selling author Johann Hari went on an epic journey across the world to meet the leading scientists and experts investigating why this is happening to us\u200a\u2014\u200aand discovered that everything we think we know on this subject is wrong.
\nWe think our inability to focus is a personal failing\u200a\u2014\u200aa flaw in each one of us. It is not. This has been done to us\u200a\u2014\u200aby powerful external forces. Our focus has been stolen. Johann discovered there are twelve deep cases of this crisis, all of which have robbed some of our attention. He shows how he learned this in a thrilling journey that takes him from Silicon Valley dissidents who figured out how to hack human attention, to veterinarians who diagnose dogs with ADHD; from a favela in Rio where everyone lost their attention in a particularly surreal way, to an office in New Zealand that discovered a remarkable technique to restore their workers\u2019 attention.
\nCrucially, he learned how\u200a\u2014\u200aas individuals, and as a society\u200a\u2014\u200awe can get our focus back, if we are determined to fight for it. The answers will surprise and thrill you. This is a book about our attention crisis unlike any you\u2019ve read before.
\nSource: https://stolenfocusbook.com/
\nAbout the\xa0author
\nJohann Hari is a British-Swiss writer who has authored three New York Times best-selling books. They have been translated into 38 languages, and been praised by a broad range of people, from Oprah to Noam Chomsky, from Elton John to Naomi Klein.
\nHis latest book, \u2018Stolen Focus: Why You Can\u2019t Pay Attention\u2019, was published in January 2022.
\nHis first book, \u2018Chasing the Scream: the First and Last Days of the War on Drugs\u2019, was adapted into the Oscar-nominated film \u2018The United States Vs Billie Holiday\u2019.\xa0
\nHis second book, \u2018Lost Connections: Uncovering The Real Causes of Depression\u200a\u2014\u200aand the Unexpected Solutions\u2019 was described by the British Journal of General Practice as \u201cone of the most important texts of recent years\u201d, and shortlisted for an award by the British Medical Association.
\nJohann\u2019s TED talks have been viewed more than 80 million times. The first is named \u2018Everything You Think You Know About Addiction is Wrong\u2019. The second is entitled \u2018This Could Be Why You Are Depressed or Anxious\u2019.
\nSource: https://stolenfocusbook.com/the-author/
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\nBig idea #1\u200a\u2014\u200aThe 12 reasons you can\u2019t pay attention
\nThe book is structured around the 12 reasons we\u2019ve lost our ability to focus. They are;
\nJames Williams, a former Google strategist (and now dissenter) talks about this idea that we are living through, \u201ca denial of service attack on our minds\u201d. There\u2019s so much information attacking our brains, they are overloaded and don\u2019t function as well. We\u2019re drinking from a firehose.\xa0
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\nBig idea #2\u200a\u2014\u200aThe system is\xa0rigged
\nAll of the 12 reasons have some link to a broader systemic issue. Talking to the different people and scientists and researchers etc, that Johann spoke to as part of this book, who have been doing the work around this, this is the common theme.
\nAnd this isn\u2019t just about Facebook or big tech, but frankly most of the big tech companies reward structures are based around usage. More use = more data,, which is what they sell, which = more money. People from the inside of these tech companies are now speaking out about the decisions being made internally in those organisations, why they\u2019re being made, and the impact of them.
\nIt is completely in these company\u2019s control to make those different decisions, make the ones that would actually be an improvement to society. That would maybe get back to where social media could have been, and maybe was 10-15 years ago when it first started. The things that made it appealing in the first place.
\nHowever, now they know that something that inflames or angers gets a bigger response; it gets more shares, and it gets more attention, which brings them more money. Therefore that\u2019s what is pushed to us.
\nThe timeline and the infinite scroll that\u2019s a feature of a lot of social media platforms could also easily be changed at the flick of a switch, but they don\u2019t, because the more you\u2019re on there, the longer that infinite scroll keeps you there with the distorted timeline, the more information they\u2019re gathering.
\nWe can\u2019t just tech detox ourselves out of this by silencing our notifications or going on a silent retreat. A lot of the people designing these platforms, won\u2019t let their kids use them, and they won\u2019t use it themselves. So it just goes to show that if they\u2019re not eating their own dog food, why should we be the guinea pigs doing it?
\nEx-Googler James Williams was speaking at a conference with leading tech designers. And he asked them the simple question; \u201chow many of you want to live in the world that you are designing?\u201d. There was an uncomfortable silence in the room, nobody put up their hand.
\nThese platforms really are the dumbing down of humanity and society, and diminishing our attention at a time we need it more than ever. The way that social media platforms are changing the conversation and shaping the conversation, is really quite terrifying. And never mind when you get into the stories and the evidence around radicalization and some of the really dark things that social media platforms are feeding people and continue to feed people, because that\u2019s how they\u2019re designed.
\nWe can\u2019t just not use tech. It\u2019s too simplistic and too unrealistic. But it is worth considering what we\u2019re using and how we\u2019re using it.
\nJohann speaks to Nir Eyal, who literally wrote the book (Hooked), which became the book these big tech companies used to build their platforms and build their systems and services in a way that people cannot escape from them. The interview is quite heated as Nir suggests that people just turn off their notifications, and if they don\u2019t, that\u2019s on them. There\u2019s a role for personal responsibility, but when the system is designed for the opposite, it\u2019s a real challenge at a societal level.
\nThere\u2019s lots of tech examples there, but it\u2019s the same with some of the food systems about what gets rewarded; keeping costs low and therefore the decisions that are made in order to maintain the status quo, maximise shareholder profitability, rather than maintain (or improve) nutritional value.
\nSimilar with climate change and pollution. There\u2019s examples of different health, stress, and attention outcomes for people living in areas with more pollution, versus those who get to live in slightly cleaner areas.
\nIt all goes to show the level of systemic decisions and issues at play in terms of the holistic health and wellbeing of society and populations.
\nAnd it\u2019s really hard to read some of this and not feel like you\u2019re being taken down a conspiracy theory route. But at the same time, given how public much of this information is, you realise it\u2019s not really a conspiracy, this is actually how things are happening and we are the guinea pigs (and the product) in this experiment.
\nBig idea #3\u200a\u2014\u200aWhat to\xa0do?
\nOne of the things that the book is not, is a book of hacks. This book is not about how to hack your way around the, the systems that are designed to set us all up to fail.
\nAt the same time, it\u2019s easy to throw hands up in the air and assume that we can\u2019t do anything because there\u2019s such huge power at play. There is a balance of using things in a smarter way, and looking for bigger change.
\nSome of the things that Johann talks about in terms of the individual things that he does include;
\nHe says that the pandemic has supercharged the direction in which we\u2019re heading. If we were heading down a pretty miserable path, when it comes to technology use and our stolen focus beforehand, this has been exacerbated by the last couple of years as we\u2019re much more connected, spending much more time on devices trying to block out the outside world, numbing ourselves, and more stressed.\xa0
\nHe also importantly, calls for a bigger change. He calls it Attention Rebellion, which would call for;
\nHe says it\u2019s small creative groups of individuals and societies that will create this change, that\u2019s why we have things like weekends. We need people who get together and say, \u2018this is not good enough, something needs to change\u2019. We need to be these people, and find these people; join them, vote for them, support them, whatever it needs to be, because without that, nothing will actually change.
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