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Blink 3 of 8 - The 5 AM Club
by Robin Sharma
Own Your Attention in an Age of Distraction
Finding Focus offers practical guidance on mastering attention and enhancing productivity. Zelana Montminy shares strategies to identify distractions, cultivate mindfulness, and sustain concentration, ultimately fostering efficiency and balance in our increasingly chaotic lives.
Let’s begin with a clear mission. We’re going to reclaim our attention as something precious – something that belongs to us, not to our devices or the endless feed of information and entertainment that’s constantly asking for views. For this to happen, we’ve got to create a world where focus isn’t a luxury or a rare gift, but a natural state we can return to. That means quieting the external noise and the internal chatter so that we can direct our attention to where it truly matters.
This requires a solid foundation, one that has five pillars – vision, fuel, sleep, movement, and nature. These are like the basic nutrients that will be needed in order for your attention to function as best it can.
Let’s start with vision. In a world of endless pings, a clear vision acts like a compass: it will always be there to tell you what deserves your time and what doesn’t. So before we go any further, take a moment to picture the life you want to be paying attention to. Write it down. This helps to create accountability.
Fuel, a.k.a. food, is also of extreme importance. Your brain is an energy-hungry organ, and for it to pay sharp attention it needs good fuel. Think antioxidant-rich plants and omega-3s. In fact, your brain and your gut have a strong connection. Studies have linked the microbiome patterns in your gut with mood and cognition, and even short shifts in gut health can nudge memory and attention. So keep your gut happy with probiotic foods and fiber.
Of course, sleep is also a big factor when it comes to memory. If you don’t get your minimum of seven to eight hours for a prolonged period, your reaction time, memory, and self-control will all suffer. In one study, when people stayed awake for 17–24 hours, their hand–eye coordination slid to levels comparable with being legally intoxicated – exactly the kind of impairment that severely erodes complex thinking and attention.
Now, movement isn’t just about the body. It also elevates the neurotransmitters linked to motivation and focus. The executive skills you rely on to plan, filter, and switch gears all strengthen with regular physical activity. One large study showed that even moderate exercise – like a brisk walk or light jogging – improves thinking. You don’t need perfection; you just need momentum. Aim for roughly 150 minutes a week and you should be in good shape.
Finally, don’t underestimate the benefits of nature. If digital life drains top-down focus, nature refills it through “soft fascination” – the effortless pull of wind in trees, water and light, birdsong. That gentle engagement lets your directed attention rest and rebuild. Just two hours a week in green spaces has been shown to correlate with better health and well-being, whether it’s one long hike or several mini-walks.
So, set a compelling North Star, feed your brain, protect your sleep, move your body, and let nature restore you. That’s a focus-ready life taking shape.
Finding Focus (2025) is a roadmap for taking back control of your mind in a world that never stops tugging at it. It explains how we can quiet the chaos, strengthen our attention, and reconnect with what really matters. It’s an invitation to slow down, think clearer, and live with more intention – one focused moment at a time.
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Try Blinkist to get the key ideas from 7,500+ bestselling nonfiction titles and podcasts. Listen or read in just 15 minutes.
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Blink 3 of 8 - The 5 AM Club
by Robin Sharma