
The Question That Cuts Through Everything
May 4, 2026 - 31:07
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You know what distracts you. But do you know why? In this episode, Joel and Marissa dig into the real source of distraction—and it's not your phone, your boss, or the pile of laundry calling your name. Nearly half the ti...
The Deeper Problem with Distractions is an episode from Focus on This by Michael Hyatt. You know what distracts you. But do you know why? In this episode, Joel and Marissa dig into the real source of distraction—and it's not your phone, you...
This episode belongs to Focus on This.
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Published Mar 23, 2026, 36:39 long, audio available.
You know what distracts you. But do you know why? In this episode, Joel and Marissa dig into the real source of distraction—and it's not your phone, your boss, or the pile of laundry calling your name. Nearly half the time, we're interrupting ourselves. The good news: once you understand what’s driving your distraction, you can actually do something about it. Less white knuckling, more momentum. Key Takeaways You Are the Biggest Distraction. Research shows we self-interrupt about 49% of the time. External interruptions get the blame, but the real culprit is usually us—reaching for something easier the moment things get hard. Your Brain Is Optimizing for Easy. Distraction spikes when tasks get difficult, boring, or tedious. That pull toward Instagram or your inbox isn't laziness; it's your brain chasing a dopamine hit over a delayed reward. Design Your Environment to Win. Willpower runs out, especially as the day wears on. The smarter play is to remove temptations before they become a choice: turn off the phone, close the door, change your Slack status, and tell your team in advance when you're going dark. Lower the Bar to Raise Your Output. Making the hard thing more enjoyable is often more effective than trying to make yourself tougher. Temptation stacking, time-bounded work sessions, and background music might feel like cheating, but they’re actually strategic. Frustration Tolerance Is a Muscle. And like any muscle, you can build it. Every time you acknowledge that something is hard or boring and do it anyway, you're making it a little easier to do the next hard thing. That’s the essence of maturity: doing something you don’t like to get a result you do like. A Real Break Is Productive. Distraction is sometimes your brain's way of signaling it's spent. A 10-minute walk, a snack, or even a bath beats scrolling social media—and you'll come back sharper for it. Watch on YouTube at: This episode was produced by Sarah Vorhees Wendel of VW Sound
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The Deeper Problem with Distractions is an episode from Focus on This by Michael Hyatt.
This episode is 36:39 long.
This episode was published on Mar 23, 2026.
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The Deeper Problem with Distractions is from Focus on This by Michael Hyatt.
Published Mar 23, 2026 and 36:39 long