Sweeping and drinking coffee

There they were, doing both things at once. Sweeping. Drinking coffee.
Neither was being done particularly well.
They’d spilled some coffee down their shirt. They’d missed some of the dirt and leaves and kept resweeping the same area, again and again. (Or maybe they didn’t realize they’d already swept that area.)
Juggling tasks can lead us towards overwhelm. We keep taking on more and more things - sometimes juggling two or three or more things at once.
- The cyclist who was checking their phone and eating a banana. And riding.
- The leader who was on two zoom calls at once on two separate devices - one earplug for each meeting.
- The workshop attendee who was also checking their email and tallying up some data all at once.
In our rush, push and drive to get things done, we think the juggle is worth it, that we can do it, that we’re smarter than the brain research, that it doesn’t mess with OUR brain.
Yet it does.
The more we continue to try and do multiple things at once, the more overloaded we feel, the less we get done.
Of all the habits to unlearn and re-engineer, the juggle is one that’s so worth fighting off when it calls.
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