Do Not Disturb

This week I am going to challenge you to actively avoid interruptions when you are doing important tasks or activities.

A great first step toward eliminating distractions is stopping the barrage of messages we constantly receive. Silence your phone or put in another room, close any windows on your computer that aren’t essential to your work, and disable desktop notifications. This might be difficult at first, but you will likely soon realize how much easier it is to get things done with fewer distractions.

If you absolutely have to be reachable, either by family or clients, create a way for them to do so in case of emergency. Otherwise, do your best to remain completely undisturbed when focusing on your tasks.

This helps curb our habit of being instantaneously reactive and instead helps us become deliberately responsive.

If you’re immediately reactive, you’re constantly jumping from task to task with no real purpose or intention. A call comes in and you instantly answer, whether you are in the proper mindset to do so or not.

However, if you are deliberately responding, you might choose to ignore that same call. Then, when you are ready, you can take a moment to compose yourself, organize your thoughts, orchestrate a plan, call the person back, and execute the call perfectly. It might be ten minutes later, but you’re much more prepared, and therefore, the outcome is better.

Develop systems where you are in “do not disturb” mode and can focus completely on the task, meeting, or activity you are engaged with. Make it clear to people who need access to you that this is what is happening so they know when they will hear back from you, and you won’t feel a need to come up for air constantly to respond to them.

True disconnection from distraction is about prioritization of what’s important to you. Respond, don’t react.

That’s it for this week! Let me know your thoughts in the comments.

Yours for health, wellbeing & peak performance - Dr. Greg

Greg Wells PhD

For Dr. Greg Wells, health and performance, particularly under extreme conditions, are personal and professional obsessions. As a scientist and physiologist, he has dedicated his career to making the science of human limits understandable and actionable. Dr. Wells has spoken to audiences all over the world at events such as TEDx and The Titan Summit, where he has shared the stage with Robin Sharma, Richard Branson, Steve Wozniak and Deepak Chopra.

For over 25 years, Dr. Wells has worked with some of the highest-performing individuals on the planet, including Olympic and World champions, and with organizations ranging from General Electric to BMO, Deloitte, KPMG, BMW, Audi, Sysco Foods, YPO and Air Canada. He is also committed to inspiring children and young adults through his close working relationship with school boards and independent schools.

A veteran endurance athlete, Dr. Wells has participated in the grueling Nanisivik Marathon 600 miles north of the Arctic Circle, Ironman Canada and the Tour D’Afrique, an 11,000 km cycling race that is the longest in the world. He is also a travel and expedition adventurer who has journeyed through every imaginable terrain and conditions in over 50 countries around the world.

Dr. Wells is author of three best-selling books – Superbodies, The Ripple Effect, and The Focus Effect – and hosted the award-winning Superbodies series, which aired on Olympic broadcasts worldwide in 2010 and 2012.

Dr. Wells has a PhD in Physiology, served as an Associate Professor of Kinesiology at the University of Toronto and is an exercise medicine researcher at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto.

He is the CEO and founder of The Wells Group, a global consulting firm committed to achieving the moonshot of helping teams, schools and businesses become places where people get healthy, perform optimally and ultimately - reach their potential.

http://www.drgregwells.com
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