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'Don't Talk to Me in the Corners' - Lewis Hamilton’s Guide to Multitasking & Focus
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If you are reading this then you are most likely to be a high-achiever or on the road to becoming one. You see, only 10% of people read or listen to material with the sole intent of self-improvement. You probably read productivity blogs, business magazines or listen to industry leaders, in your particular employment sector, talking about the future so that you can stay one step ahead of your competition. Whatever you are doing, you are doing it because you want to be more informed and, in doing so, become more productive. As you’ve most probably noticed, the top high-achievers seem to be calm, confident and, above all, incredibly productive. The amount they write, talk and accomplish is phenomenal. They seem to be able to do it all - they have truly mastered the art of multitasking. How can you be as awesome at multitasking as them, for surely here lies the holy grail of productivity? Or does it?
Formula 1 World Champion, Lewis Hamilton, does not multitask.At this year’s Malaysian Grand Prix, on Lap 41, Lewis was in second place and struggling with the team’s current tyre choice and pit stop strategy. He’d recently used the radio to complain about the tyres when suddenly his team accidentally broadcast a message from Mercedes technical director, Paddy Lowe. Hamilton responded: “I can hear you. I don't know what I'm supposed to be doing. Paddy says I might be doing another stop!”There was confusion in the cockpit.But Lewis kept on pushing - he had only 14 laps in which to catch the race leader and he was only 14 seconds behind. He was focused.And then, another radio call came through. It said that if Hamilton kept pushing he could catch Vettel with 5 laps remaining.But that one radio call almost ended the race for Hamilton. He was entering a corner when the radio call came and his attention was momentarily diverted - he struggled to keep the car on the racetrack.
‘Don’t talk to me through the corners! I nearly just went off!’ he responded to his race engineer.
Yes, real world champions - they don’t multitask. Those at the top, the high-achievers we all aspire to be, they do one thing at a time and they do it very well.You see multitasking actually does two things to your brain; it makes you less productive and it reduces your Emotional Intelligence (EI).Stanford University professor Clifford Nass, who studied the social and psychological impacts of media, says that multitasking and the swapping back and forth between different types of interactive media makes us less not more efficient."The research is almost unanimous, which is very rare in social science, and it says that people who chronically multitask show an enormous range of deficits, they're basically terrible at all sorts of cognitive tasks." says Nass.He says that not only are those who multitask less productive than those who focus on one task at a time but they tend to be socially and emotionally immature and find it hard to read people in social situations. They also prefer to hide behind a text or email rather than call someone.When was the last time you called someone instead of sending them a text?Multitasking lowers your performance because your brain can only focus on one thing at a time, your brain works sequentially, so when you attempt to do two things at once you perform badly at both.Let’s look at some everyday examples.
- Watching TV whilst eating and using your phone or tablet to look something up on the internet.
- Writing an email whilst in a business meeting.
- Texting whilst driving.
- Working out whilst listening to music and reading a book.
- Cooking, talking on the phone, texting, watching YouTube and uploading photos of the awesome meal you’ve just made.
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