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G**E
Should be Required Reading for the Entire World
This is not the book I was expected. It was far more valuable. I bought it in hopes of gaining a better understanding of some displeasing personal habits I've newly developed (which it has), but more importantly, it's helped me gain a deeper understanding as to why and how our world has arrived at our current, alarming circumstance. Unlike self-help books that offer over-simplistic, doomed-to-fail hacks to regain one's focus, STOLEN FOCUS takes a deep dive into the topic, exploring the vast range of human functions and joys dependent on our capacity to focus, how a dearth of it (within ourselves and society at large) impacts our lives, plus, how and why our capacity to focus has diminished over time. Only when we understand the how and why, can we begin to tackle the question: what must we do to restore it? Granted, the author does not offer fast and easy resolutions, primarily because there are none. However, knowledge is power, and even though he tackles the subject with the gravity it deserves, he presents this wake-up call with wisdom, compassion and caring. To boot, it's a riveting page-turner and hauntingly prescient. Published back in 2022, the book foretells so much of what has since happened to our society. However, that's not to suggest it ends on a negative note. Throughout the book,the author uses practical solutions from history to show how current problems may be overcome. As such, I finished the book with greater incentive to protect my focus from the many who aim to steal it, and it's working. 3 months later, I find myself way less distractable and feeling oddly empowered. Seeing the world from a clearer perspective doesn't fix the myriad problems around us, but it makes it easier to determine where we might best focus our energies and where we best not. This makes an excellent companion piece to Charles Duhigg's THE POWER OF HABIT (published in 2012 but even more resonant now) and Kate Murphy's YOU'RE NOT LISTENING.I wish everybody would read these 3 books (oh, and also the 2008 classic Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi's FLOW: The Psychology of Optimal Experience.") if these were required reading for everybody in the world, the world would be a much happier, pleasanter place.
M**R
A Very Important Read
This is one of those books that I can't say I enjoyed, but I'm very glad I read it.Like most people, I have problems focusing and staying on task at times. The ubiquitous allure of social media being just a click away is an ever-present temptation that often becomes a self-imposed distraction. I fight it, but I often lose the battle.In this incredibly researched, yet easy to read, book, author and journalist Johann Hari explains many of the reasons almost all of society is struggling with this issue. Along the way I learned a few new terms like "switch cost effect" and "surveillance capitalism" that will help me improve my focus.Some of his solutions seem a bit extreme to me (and even scary - no way I want the government taking over Facebook!) but he throws them out for consideration and to get the reader thinking about this issue and how we can individually, and even collectively, reclaim our attention. I specifically like how he tied our problems with focusing on fixing climate change with our attention crisis. In that, I think Hari makes his best points.I'd recommend this book to anyone who'd like to reclaim some of their focus. And I'd urge any parent with young children (or anyone dreaming of becoming a parent one day) to give this a read as he spends a lot of time on ADHD and ways we can improve children's attention without drugs.Hari quotes someone as saying "You don't get what you don't fight for" and in that I think we can all agree. Whether or not you think fighting for your attention (and for society to regain its ability to focus) is up to you. I'd encourage you to read this book before deciding either way.
K**I
Critical Reading
There are countless ways we are dumbed-down. “Stolen Focus” outlines the manipulation tactics that seek to eliminate free thinking because such people are easier to control. A thorough and friendly manner make reading it educational and fun.If you’ve ever noticed how some sales people prefer customers that are impulsive and not concerned about making responsible decisions, then this book is for you. In a world where many have no issue using other people’s effort and energy to further their personal agenda, you’d do well to put all your decisions in your hands. This book will show you how to build that skill-set. The sooner you do it, the better.
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