The Daily Stoic

(Dana P.) #1

W


April   21st
DON’T LET YOUR ATTENTION SLIDE

“When   you let your    attention   slide   for a   bit,    don’t   think   you will    get back    a   grip    on  it  whenever
you wish—instead, bear in mind that because of today’s mistake everything that follows will be
necessarily worse. . . . Is it possible to be free from error? Not by any means, but it is possible
to be a person always stretching to avoid error. For we must be content to at least escape a few
mistakes by never letting our attention slide.”
—EPICTETUS, DISCOURSES, 4.12.1; 19

inifred Gallagher, in her book Rapt, quotes David Meyer, a cognitive scientist at the University of
Michigan: “Einstein didn’t invent the theory of relativity while he was multitasking at the Swiss
patent office.” It came after, when he really had time to focus and study. Attention matters—and in an era
in which our attention is being fought for by every new app, website, article, book, tweet, and post, its
value has only gone up.
Part of what Epictetus is saying here is that attention is a habit, and that letting your attention slip and
wander builds bad habits and enables mistakes.
You’ll never complete all your tasks if you allow yourself to be distracted with every tiny interruption.
Your attention is one of your most critical resources. Don’t squander it!

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