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Indistractable
Indistractable: How to Control Your Attention and Choose Your Life | Nir Eyal
With groundbreaking research and exclusive interviews, Nir Eyal, author of the bestselling Hooked, lays bare the processes of distractions and how we can finally get them under control to give people the ultimate superpower of the 21st century: being indistractable.
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LisaLovesToRead
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Pickpick

A worthwhile read! Thought provoking

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ShaaM
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Pickpick

Must read once but I think Hooked was more interesting

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Sharpeipup
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Got distracted from my housework but this book, ironic, no? 🤣😂

BookishMarginalia 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 4y
35 likes2 stack adds1 comment
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EchoLogical
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Seems to be a popular quote, probably resonated with a lot of readers. The book was an interesting read. It discusses different types of distractions and how to deal with them. It‘s ironic that the author is the same one who wrote “Hooked” and taught companies how to make their products more attention grabbing to consumers. Great model, I guess. Create a problem and sell the solution 🤷🏾‍♀️

charl08 I find these highlights distracting and have to turn them off! 4y
EchoLogical @charl08 That makes sense! I like seeing what other people highlight but honestly, I don‘t read in the kindle app very much so I never really thought about it that much. I usually read in Libby. 4y
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AkashPhoenix
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Tantalus‘s curse—forever reaching for something! Seems a curse that we all bear!

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annahenke
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Loving this practical advice book on focus!

Sace I need this. 5y
annahenke @Sace so did I! It‘s great! 5y
Sace Just put the ebook on hold at the library 😁 5y
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CampbellTaraL
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Mehso-so

A great book for people who don't read but need change. Concise points and cited studies with chapters short enough to read in 3-5 minute bursts. Sections on actionable steps and guides to implement make the overwhelming task of cutting back distractions doable.

(Continued in comments)

CampbellTaraL For the bibliophiles: the book is structured specifically for an audience that doesn't spend hours dedicated to a focused task such as reading. I found myself distracted by the sudden shifts from one chapter to the next; I never felt like I was invested because I was rushed off to the next thing. 5y
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sarahreinhard
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Pickpick

Whipped through this one, and I‘d call it worth the reading. I like the straightforward approach and while I couldn‘t help but wonder if timeboxing only works in certain situations (but maybe this is an opportunity for me to do my own writing 😉).

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ElectricKatyLand
Mehso-so

Quick read that might have been better as a longer essay and/or Ted Talk. Eyal shares four components of focusing on what you want to, instead of your tech devices: internal & external triggers, traction (doing what you want), and distraction. Each chapter has action items and a concise summary. The suggestions are good, but I only found a couple that resonated with me personally.