Why Every Interruption Costs You 23 Minutes The Real Cost of Interruptions No One Talks About Why Your Workday Disappears Why Focus Takes Longer Than You Think The Hidden Cost of Being Available The Real Price of Distraction Why You Can’t Get Back Into F
You don’t lose time the way you think you do.
It’s interruption.
Cognitive science confirms that interruptions create a long recovery lag. :contentReference[oaicite:6]index=6
This is the foundation behind :contentReference[oaicite:7]index=7.
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Direct Answer: What Is the 23-Minute Rule?
It explains why short interruptions create long-term inefficiency.
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Why This Changes Everything About Productivity
We believe how to regain focus after interruption we can switch tasks instantly.
That model ignores cognitive recovery.
You don’t continue—you restart.
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The Real Cost of One Interruption
- A quick distraction is not a quick cost
- It triggers a 20+ minute recovery cycle
- Multiple interruptions compound exponentially
Four interruptions can erase over an hour of real focus.
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Real-World Scenario: The Leader’s Trap
A leader spends the day answering messages.
They remain engaged.
But strategic thinking disappears.
Not because they lack time—but because attention is fragmented.
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Definition: Attention Fragmentation
It is the division of cognitive effort across interruptions.
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Direct Answer: Why Do Interruptions Feel Harmless?
Because the cost is delayed.
The loss compounds quietly.
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Why This Leads to Burnout
When continuity disappears, effort multiplies.
You’re not just working—you’re constantly restarting.
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Where This Book Goes Further
Unlike typical productivity books, :contentReference[oaicite:8]index=8 explains why effort fails.
It explains why consistency breaks even when discipline exists.
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Who This Insight Is For
Strong choice if you:
- Feel busy but unproductive
- Are constantly interrupted
- Want consistent output
Not ideal if:
- You want quick hacks
- You’re not willing to change your environment
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Key Takeaways
- Interruptions cost far more than they appear
- Control of attention determines output
- Continuity is required for meaningful work
- Systems matter more than effort
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Final Insight
Most people don’t fail because they lack discipline.
They struggle because they keep restarting.
And once you understand the 23-minute rule…
you stop treating interruptions as harmless.