Focus is something I have always struggled with. As an electrical engineering graduate and also someone that was once an activist back in school, I understand how important it is to keep attention steady. In activism, if you lose focus on the cause, you lose the fight. But in daily life, distractions seem to come from every side, and keeping balance has never been easy.
One of the first things I do to stay focused is to set clear priorities. Engineering trained me to break problems into steps, so I try to use the same in life. Each morning, I pick out the two or three most important things I must achieve, and I try to face them before any other thing. If I don’t set these priorities, my day just scatters and I end up doing nothing meaningful.
Another thing I do is avoid too many arguments online. Because of my activist background, I sometimes want to jump into every debate, especially when I feel someone is wrong. But I have learned that not every argument deserves my energy. These days I just scroll past or keep quiet. This single change has saved me a lot of time and mental stress.
I also discovered that quiet time is very important. When there is too much noise, I can’t focus well. So I try to create a small personal space where I stay away from distractions. Back in school, even during group planning, I noticed the most productive ideas came when I was alone. So now I always try to create that alone time to clear my head.
Reading also helps me focus better. Instead of wasting hours on social media, I open a book or even old materials from my engineering courses. Reading builds discipline and gives me a sense of progress. When I feed my mind with something useful, I don’t feel restless like when I just keep scrolling my phone.
Sometimes I take short walks. It sounds simple, but walking outside for 10-15 minutes clears my mind. If I force myself to sit when I’m already restless, I lose concentration. But once I take that walk, I come back with better energy.
The last thing I do is remind myself of purpose. Back in activism, we could stay long hours planning or marching because we knew why we were doing it. That same purpose driven mindset helps me today. If I know the reason behind my work, it becomes easier to resist distractions.
At the end of the day, I don’t think anybody can say they are focused 100% of the time. Distractions are everywhere and they will not disappear. But with priorities, quiet time, less arguments, reading, walking, and reminding myself of purpose, I try to stay on track. It’s still a work in progress, but little progress is better than none.
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