The Organised Mind

By: Daniel Levitin

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A place for everything, and everything in its place.

It's a principle that, for centuries, has allowed us to keep our physical world in order so that we can focus on whatever the task at hand is.

However, these days we have added the complexity of our digital and social worlds to the mix, making it harder and harder to keep things organised, and thus stay on track with the most important goals in our life.

Join us for the next 12 minutes as we explore how to create an organised mind so we can get more done, and ultimately succeed in a world that is built for distraction.


The Current State of Information Overload

Each day we are confronted with an unprecedented amount of information. Each of us processes about 100,000 words a day through all of the messages we are exposed to.

The average person watches 5 hours of television each day, which is the equivalent of processing 20 gigabytes of audio-visual images.

What does this have to do with your mind and how well it's organised?

There are two things to consider here.

First, your brain evolved to focus on one thing at a time. The processing capacity of the conscious mind has been estimated at approximately 120 bits per second, which means you can barely understand two people talking to you at the same time. Multi-tasking is a myth - your brain simply doesn't have the capacity to do it.

Second, this means that you need to make decisions about who and what to pay attention to throughout the day. Your brain seems to have the ability to make a certain number of decisions every day, and once we reach that limit, we can't make any more, regardless of how important they are.

This means that every status update you read on Facebook and every text message you get from a friend is competing for resources in your brain with more important things like how to finish that project that's due by the end of the day.

Once you've exhausted the limit of your brain's decision making capacity for the day, you are unable to make good decisions, and ultimately you are unable to do great work.

To understand why this is important, let's take a look at how memory and attention work.


How Attention Works

In order to understand how to have a well organised mind, we need to know how our minds organise themselves.

There are four main components of the human attentional system, which is what drives who and what you pay attention to.

The first component is something we call daydreaming mode. This is where you envision the future, projecting yourself into a situation and imagine how that encounter might play out. The interesting thing is that scientists have uncovered that this is the default state of your mind. Basically, whenever you are NOT focused on a task, you are in daydreaming mode.

The second component is the "stay-on-task" mode. This is the mode you use when you are doing your taxes, writing a report, or trying to drive in a foreign country. Researchers call this mode "the central executive."

While you are awake, you are in one of those two states, but never at the same time.

The third component is the attentional filter, which determines, as you might expect, what you pay attention to. Your mind doesn't have the capacity to pay attention to everything that is going on around you, so it filters out everything that it deems irrelevant to you right now. For instance, your brain doesn't register all of the cars zipping by you on the other side of the highway when you are on your way to visiting Uncle Joe in upstate New York.

There are two principles that the attentional filter uses to decide what to pay attention to - change and importance.

Your brain quickly notices anything that changes in the environment, and lets those things through. For instance, if you are driving on a smooth road and all of a sudden it gets very bumpy, your mind will become aware of it instantly.

Your brain also notices things that are personally important to you. For instance, if somebody in a crowded room says your name, you'll hear it loud and clear.

The fourth component of the attentional system is the attentional switch, allowing us to direct our attention to one thing, and then to another.

Here's a practical example to explain how this works in the real world. Let's say you are reading a book, and you are "in the zone." Then, all of a sudden, your phone buzzes - a change in your physical environment that your attentional filter lets through. At that moment, you decide that you want to see who just sent you a text and what it says, and you use your attentional switch to direct your attention from the book to the text message.

All of this happens so fast that we're not aware that we are switching modes, nor are we conscious of making a decision. But that's exactly what we do.


How Memory Works

We've covered exactly how memory works - or more to the point, doesn't work - in our summary of Stumbling Upon Happiness.

The quick version of that is that we don't remember things quite nearly as well as we think we do. And to make matters worse, we don't always know when we are recalling things accurately or not.

Which brings us to the ultimate conclusion that our memory sucks.

So what do we do about it? We find as many ways as we can to externalise our memories. This is an idea that goes all the way back to the Greeks, and its effectiveness has been confirmed over and over again by contemporary neuroscience.

There is evidence of this all around you. You don't try and remember where you need to be at every moment of the day, you put your meetings in a calendar. You don't try and remember all of the things you need to do, you make a todo list. And so on.

And this is where we start to discuss the strategies you can employ to create your very own Organised Mind.


Getting Part of Your Mind Outside Your Body

The most fundamental principle of the organised mind is to shift the burden of organising from our brains to the external world.

The world's most successful people all employ systems that help them determine what to pay attention to and how to remember important things.

One of the most important reasons for this is so that they can remain focussed on the most important tasks they have to complete.

In order to understand how they do that, we need to understand what happens if they don't.

Your mind wandering mode does more than just think about the future. It is constantly scanning the environment for things that have remained undone. For instance, if you said that you would pick up some milk on the way home so your kids can have cereal tomorrow morning, your mind wandering mode will keep reminding you to do it. Which isn't very helpful while you are in the middle of preparing for the biggest pitch in company history.

This consumes precious mental energy that you can't afford to waste, because, as we've already covered, you have a finite amount of it every single day.

The simple solution to this problem is to write every down every thought that intrudes on what you are doing. As long as you write it down somewhere you know you'll find it when you need it, your mind wandering mode will chill out, leaving you to focus on the pitch.

A surprisingly effective system for doing this is to use a 3x5 notecard system, with one item per card. You sort those cards into different categories, such as:

  • things to do today
  • things to do this week
  • things that can wait
  • junk drawer
  • shopping lists
  • errands
  • things to do at home
  • things to do at work
  • social
  • things to ask Pat to do
  • Things related to Mom's health care
  • phone calls to make

This might sound like busy work, but the point is that getting things out of your mind and into some system that helps you get organised will ultimately free your mind to work on the most important things in your business and life.

Once your mind wandering mode knows that there's a place for everything, and everything is in it's place, it will let your "central executive" get back to work without interruption.

Now that we've covered how our minds work and the main principles of getting organised, let's dive into some specific tactics and strategies you can use to be more productive.


Organising Email

Most of you have your email programs set to put through arriving emails automatically or to check every few minutes. Basically, you have set up a scenario where you are systematically interrupted hundreds of times per day.

As we've already explored, this wreaks havoc on your attention, causing you to waste precious energy on task switching.

Instead, check email two or three times a day, at predetermined times. Even better, to keep your mind wandering mode at bay, schedule them in your calendar.


Organising Stuff

No matter how efficient we become at organising and externalising our memories, sometimes we lose things. It's best to create contingency plans for when we do.

For instance:

  • Hide a spare house key in your garden;
  • Keep a spare car key in your desk at work;
  • Use your phone to take a picture of your passport, driver's licence, health insurance card, and both sides of your credit cards;
  • Carry a USB key with your medical records on it;
  • When you are travelling, keep one form of ID and some cash or one credit card separate from your wallet and other cards, so that you don't lose everything all at once;
  • Carry an envelope for travel receipts when you are out of town.
  • Etc.

Organising our social world

The more successful you become, the bigger your social circles become, and the more you'll need to be able to keep your social life in order.

One strategy that most successful people use is to keep contact files with contextual information such as:

  • where they met someone new;
  • what they talked about;
  • who introduced them.

Then, they will add tags or notes to help organise those entries into categories they can easily dive in and out of at a moments notice:

  • work friends;
  • school friends;
  • childhood friends;
  • best friends;
  • acquaintances;
  • friends of friends;
  • etc.

Organising our Time

As a leader, most of the important things you need to get done require long periods of sustained focus and thought.

So, it makes sense to organise your day in order to accomplish that.

Set aside time blocks of at least one hour at a time to do your most important work.

Also, spend 5 or 10 minutes before that session with a mind-clearing exercise. Write down everything that's on your mind before that session so that you can devote your entire mind to the focused work that needs to get done.

Make sure to schedule breaks in your work as well. No matter how well you've cleared the decks for focused work, you'll get tired and your mind wandering mode will start to sneak back in. If you start to feel the itch to check your email, see what's going on with your Facebook friends, or catch up on the news you just checked an hour ago, this is a sign that it's time to take a break.

The world's most successful people work this way, and not only do they get more done, they are less tired and neuro-chemically depleted after doing it.


Get Your Sleep

You've heard this before, but it bears repeating: you need to get your sleep.

Not only because it will allow you to bring better clarity and focus during your most important work, but because your brain processes information in 3 different ways while you sleep.

First, there is unitisation - the combining of discrete elements or chunks of an experience into a unified concept. For example, musicians and actors who are learning a new piece might practice one phrase at a time - sleep binds these together into a seamless whole.

Second, there is assimilation - the brain integrates new information into the existing network structure of other things you already know. In learning new words your brain works unconsciously to construct sample sentences with them, experimenting how they fit into your preexisting knowledge.

Finally, there is abstraction - where hidden rules are discovered and then entered into memory. Sleep has been shown to enhance the formation and understanding of abstract relations, so much so that people often wake having solved a problem that was unsolvable the night before.


Conclusion

There are many arguments for having a place for everything and keeping everything in its place.

The most important of which is that it will allow your mind - the most powerful tool you have at your disposal - to focus on the work that's most important to your long-term success.