The cost of doing everything at once is not just inefficiency—it is the slow disappearance of the feeling that anything was fully done at all.
Somewhere between the open tabs, the background notifications, and the habit of doing several things at once while finishing none of them completely, something gets lost. Not just productivity—but the experience of actually being present in what you are doing.
Single-Tasking in a Multi-Tab World explores what sustained, undivided attention actually feels like in an environment engineered to prevent it—and what its absence quietly costs over time. It examines the psychology of task-switching: why the pull toward multitasking feels productive while rarely being so, and what the constant fragmentation of focus does to thinking, creativity, and the basic experience of a day that feels meaningful rather than merely busy.
This book offers insight into the internal patterns behind distraction: the discomfort of staying with one thing, the anxiety that surfaces when stimulation is removed, and the gradual erosion of the capacity for depth that comes from years of scattered attention. It reframes single-tasking not as a productivity strategy, but as a quieter and more honest way of engaging with work and life—one that asks what it actually feels like to be fully somewhere, rather than partially everywhere.
For anyone who ends a full day feeling simultaneously exhausted and unaccomplished—this book explores the attention patterns beneath that experience with clarity, honesty, and genuine psychological depth.
Jordan Hale
Author of English-language books exploring self-improvement, entrepreneurial success, and pivotal historical events. Jordan's work distills actionable insights from history to fuel modern personal and professional growth.
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