21 Human Performance Tips For Busy People

21 Human Performance Tips For Busy People

To say my life is busy is an understatement. Writing this blog is my passion. I wouldn’t trade it for the world. But writing the blog, two weekly newsletters, and a book is a tall order. There is no team, there are no editors, web developers, graphic designers, or social media managers. I do it all. Now add all this on top of my full time job—and not just a job, but a corporate career at a prominent company. Finally, my roles of father and husband supersede all of this. This is a percarious balance, but I refuse to burn the candle at both ends. I refuse to hustle and grind, as those terms connote hurriedness and clenching. Instead, I take care of myself. I strongly believe that optimizing for health and human performance is the only way I’ll maintain this balance over the long term. 

 

I’ve put a lot of thought into how to do this and I’ve done a lot of research. So I wanted to share with you my imperfect insights on how to fit health and human performance protocols into even the busiest of schedules. 

 

First, I’ll present the health and human performance optimization tools as I categorize them by sleep, diet, health, and focus. Then, at the end, I’ll explain how I manage to fit this all in. 

 

I want to make it clear, however, that nothing in this article substitutes professional health advice. The article does not aim to address illness or disease. I’ll provide sources at the end for as many of the protocols as I can. 

 

21 human performance tips

 

Sleep

 

  • Track your wake time: Three to four hours after you wake is the optimal time to focus for most people. 

 

  • Go for a walk as early as possible after waking: The optical stimulus of scenery flowing by your field of vision as you walk helps set your nervous system for the day. 

 

  • View sunlight as early as possible after waking: Natural sunlight helps set the endocrine system (hormones) for the day. It also sets the ‘internal clock’, meaning you’ll fall asleep more easily at night if you get natural sunlight early in the morning. 

 

  • Delay coffee: This is a tough one, but hold off for 60-90 minutes before having your first coffee after waking. Again, this relates to your body’s internal clock. This little delay can improve your sleep. 

 

  • Keep it dark: Dim the lights and limit screen use at least one hour before bedtime, but preferably two hours before. Wear a sleep mask if it doesn’t bother you too much. Studies have shown that even the faintest light in the room can diminish sleep quality. 

 

  • Don’t sleep in on weekends: Keep your sleep and wake times consistent every day of the week. 

 

  • Take a morningness-eveningness questionnaire: Whether you’re a night owl or an early bird is largely determined by genetics. A morningness-eveningness questionnaire is a scientifically-developed tool that helps you identify your ideal sleep and wake times based on your circadian rhythm type. Click here to take the quiz online for free (no affiliation).

This post contains affiliate links, which help us keep the blog afloat. Click here for more information.

Graphic image of silver-plated men striving forward to represent an article on human performance

Diet

 

  • Intermittent fasting: Going for stretches of 12-14 hours without eating is not just a weight loss fad. There’s a lot of evidence supporting several health benefits that fasting produces. One such benefit is the repairing of cells. When your cells have a surplus of energy, they multiply. However, when your cells feel that they may be deprived of energy, instead of multiplying, they repair themselves. You may not want to do this all the time, but why not once in a while?

 

  • Vitamin D: Most people would benefit from supplementing with vitamin D, especially during the winter months. 

 

  • Omega 3: Is not only beneficial for heart and brain function and health, but has also been shown to alleviate depression. 
Memento mori life tracker

Health

 

  • 150 minutes of Zone 2 cardio per week: Zone 2 cardio is when you’re exerting yourself just to the point that your heart rate is elevated, but you could still have a conversation without having to pause between words to catch your breath. 

 

  • Heart health metrics: Of course, when it comes to heart health, please consult with your doctor. Don’t take cardiovascular health advice from a blog on mindfulness and Stoicism. Ask your doctor about your levels of Apo B, which is a crucial measure of cardiovascular health, but one that is less evident to most people than, say, cholesterol. 

 

  • Colon cancer screening: Do this no later than 40 years of age. 

 

  • Mammograms: Women aged 45 to 54 should get mammograms every year. Women 55 and older should switch to mammograms every 2 years, or can continue yearly screening.

 

  • Stress vs Growth mindset: Your mindset and preconceived beliefs about stress change how it affects you. If you believe stress is bad for your health, it almost certainly will be. If you believe that in moderate exposures stress is a necessary ingredient for growth, you can reduce its harmful effects. Long-term stress is certainly harmful, but one-off, acute encounters with stress are simply the body’s way of preparing itself for challenge. 

 

Focus

 

  • Focus periods: The ideal duration for a period of intense focus is 90 minutes. 

 

  • Defocus: After a 90-minute bout of focus, take 20-30 minutes to deliberately de-focus. Go for a walk. Do some stretches. Have a snack. Do anything to disengage from the work. 

 

  • Don’t look down: Placing your computer monitor in a position that forces you to look slightly upward places you in a higher state of focus. You can also simply look upward when you’re about to re-focus. 

 

  • Recharge: Naps are OK for most people but yoga nidra (also referred to as Non Sleep Deep Rest) is an excellent, short practice that really recharges the batteries. Yoga nidra is basically guided meditation that usually involves a body scan. It’s incredibly relaxing, refreshing, and can be done in as little as ten minutes. Click here to check out my favorite YouTube channel for yoga nidra (no affiliation). 

 

  • Meditate: There are countless studies demonstrating that regular mediation practice can improve focus, memory, and attention. The study I found had participants meditate for at least 12 minutes a day, five days a week. 

 

Related article: Deepen Your Mindfulness Meditation Practice

Digital image of silver-plated men striving forward to represent an article on human performance

How to fit human performance into a busy schedule 

 

I’m going to re-list all the protocols you just read. But this time, for each of them, I’ll describe how you can condense it. The idea here is one that I’ve embraced in my own life, which is that something is better than nothing. I could let all my obligations beat me down to the point where I say ‘I simply don’t have enough time for this, so I can’t do it.’ Or, I can find a way, even if it means reducing everything to its bare minimum. 

 

Sleep

 

  • Track your wake time: If you keep your sleep and wake times consistent, this only needs to be done once and takes one minute. 

 

  • Go for a walk as early as possible after waking: Combine with the protocol below.

 

  • View sunlight as early as possible after waking: Dr. Andrew Huberman of the Huberman Lab podcast recommends doing this for 10-30 minutes. Sometimes, all I can manage is 2-3 minutes, which I believe is better than not doing it at all.

 

  • Delay coffee: Going for your morning walk and getting sunlight makes this easier.

 

  • Keep it dark: Just do it.

 

  • Don’t sleep in on weekends: Just do it. It’s tempting to feel that you need to get caught up on sleep, but renowned sleep researcher Dr. Matthew Walker has said that sleep doesn’t work like a bank account; we can’t hold on to savings.

 

  • Take a morningness-eveningness questionnaire: It takes five minutes and you only need to do it once. 

 

Diet

 

  • Intermittent fasting: I do this one day a week and intend to increase the frequency gradually as I age. Plus, skipping a few meals actually saves time.

 

  • Vitamine D: If you can afford it, just do it.

 

  • Omega 3: If you can afford it, just do it.

 

Health

 

  • 150 minutes of Zone 2 cardio per week: If you can, bike or walk to work, the grocery store, or virtually anywhere within a reasonable walking or biking distance. This kills two birds with one stone and takes less time than doing 150 minutes in addition to your commutes.

 

  • Heart health metrics: Heart health warrants the 60-90 minutes it’ll take you to schedule and attend the doctor appointment(s).

 

  • Colon cancer screening: Just do it.

 

  • Mammograms: Just do it.

 

  • Stress vs Growth mindset: This is just a mindset shift. It doesn’t cost you any time.

 

  • Take a deep breath, specifically this one: It only takes a few seconds.

Focus

 

  • Focus periods: You will get more done in these 90 minutes than you would otherwise. 

 

  • Defocus: It may seem counterproductive, but if you really stick to the above protocol, it pays dividends. 

 

  • Don’t look down: Setting up an ergonomic workstation takes a small, one-off time investment, but the returns are worth it. 

 

  • Recharge: Again, it may seem counterproductive, but a 10-minute yoga nidra practice turns a lethargic afternoon into a second morning of productive focus. 

 

  • Meditate: There are many days where I can only manage 10 minutes, but this is something I never skip because meditation to me is not a human performance protocol. It’s a means of connecting with life itself. 

 

Rest is essential for optimizing human performance

 

I’ll leave you with one more protocol: take time off. Take breaks of more than just a weekend. Take that time to do more on the above protocols. I’ll be taking one of these shortly. I can’t wait to go for a long hike, and find an open space where I can sit and meditate for at least an hour. I’ll be battling jet lag, so I’ll take that opportunity to relax my sleep protocols and just watch YouTube in bed if I feel like it. I’ll have my notebook with me if the urge to write strikes, but the laptop will be far, far away. 

 

Final thoughts

 

I’m writing this almost nine months after the birth of my son. The fact that I get to wake up everyday and be his father, first and foremostly, above anything else, gives me immense joy and purpose. With that said, these last nine months have come with new demands on my time—major demands. I’ve had to adjust. I’ve had to change. But I refuse to deprioritize my health or my dreams. Something has to give, right? Well, no. Rather than forgoing, I’ve chosen to condense, to be patient, to play the long game.

 

Ryan Holiday says that good writers need to write two crappy pages a day. The idea is consistency. Show up, get two pages in, and eventually you’ll have something you can make better through editing. This is sound advice, but I’ve had to laugh at it some days—the ones where I’m lucky if I can write two crappy sentences. Just because I only have 10 minutes to write, doesn’t mean I wont sit down and write. The same goes for all the protocols I’ve shared here. There is always time for health and human performance, no matter how little. But when the clock strikes bedtime, I shut off the laptop. Without fail. There’s always tomorrow, unless you burn yourself out today. 

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How To Focus On The Process

How To Focus On The Process

The outcome is the obstacle. When fixation on the desired outcome obscures focus on the task at hand, errors occur. Conversely, if our actions are not clouded by oversight, but executed with care, lightheartedness, and undivided attention, then we travel a much clearer path toward the outcome. This article aims to provide answers to the question ‘How to focus on the process?’. I’ll share some personal observations, but also provide some practical focus tips to improve undivided attention. I’ve also collected several science-based tips shown to enhance focus. We’ll discuss how process focus affects performance and look at how to focus on the process and not the outcome. The true aim of this piece is not to help us achieve more, but to help us realize the innate beauty of a life unobstructed by harmful grasping onto desired outcomes.

A dictionary-style definition of the terms 'process focus' and 'outcome focus'

My job often demands flawless execution, but of course like everyone, I make mistakes. I recently took some time to analyze my mistakes, non-judgmentally, and I noticed a few common threads connecting the majority of my errors. Here are the three common undercurrents of my mistakes: 

 

  1. I rush
  2. I doubt myself 
  3. During the action, I say to myself ‘don’t make a mistake’ 

 

Process over results

 

When I analyzed these three circumstantial commonalities of error in my own work, I came to the conclusion that they all share one fundamental cause: lack of process focus. Let’s take rushing for example. If you think about it, rushing is the embodiment of outcome focus. Rushing is caused by a desire to be somewhere else or to be doing something else. Doubting oneself is a manifestation of fear—fear rooted in over-attachment to the outcome, or the fear of failing to get there. 

 

This is why delivering a presentation alone in your living room is far less of a burden than delivering the same presentation in front of colleagues. It’s the same action, but the latter lends itself to fear of the outcome. The last of my three signposts of error, saying to myself ‘don’t make a mistake’, is a distraction. These words entering my mind are brought there by looking ahead to the desired outcome and attaching to it a great importance, which detracts focus from what I’m actually doing. 

 

It’s clear that lack of process focus can cloud our attention and lead to mistakes. But what can we do about it? 

This post contains affiliate links, which help us keep the blog afloat. Click here for more information.

Memento mori life tracker

How to focus on the process two personal observations

 

1. Don’t scan, savor – In this age of information, where our devices are flooded with new content daily, we’ve developed a tendency to scan for the bits that interest us most. Most websites and social platforms are designed to allow us to scan and still get what we want. This habit of scanning is fine on Instagram, but when it comes to true focus, whether it’s learning to play a musical instrument, writing a report, or even listening to a family member, it can expose us to error. 

 

I like to use an analogy to help combat scanning—that of reading your favorite novel. Imagine yourself settled into a cozy nook, hot cup of something at your side, immersed in your favorite book. Your reading will be slow and pleasurable. You will savor each word, from left to right, line by line. The book is so captivating that you wouldn’t dare skip a line, much less an entire paragraph. 

Read everything like a good book

 

Bring this slow and deliberate reading to your work. Much of the information we consume is software based, and practically designed for our eyes to skip around the page. Don’t skip or scan, but simply read all the information slowly and carefully, from left to right, line by line. It takes only a few seconds longer than scanning, but it provides full context, and ensures you won’t miss anything critical.

 

  1. Pointing and calling – I first read about the pointing and calling method in James Clear’s bestselling book Atomic Habits. The method, famously used in the ultra-efficient rail network in Japan, consists of a person literally pointing at what they are about to act upon, and then calling out the action aloud. 

 

I found this to be strikingly clever. I realized immediately how well this method could transfer to information-based work. The cursor on the computer is perfect for pointing. Calling can be done aloud or internally. I am copying x information and pasting it into y document. Perform. I am analyzing x column of data to isolate y variable. Perform. I am about to meet with x person to discuss y. Perform.

 

Another truism about process focus is that its advantages are evident in both success and failure. If we look back at major accomplishments, we realize that they are not a snapshot in time, but an accumulation of countless small actions performed well. Similarly, when we look back at our failures, we can often identify and isolate one or more actions that were flawed, thereby contributing to the negative outcome. 

Man jumping over barrels representing an article on how to focus on the process

How to focus on the process – Science-based focus tips 

 

The following focus tips come to us from Dr. Andrew Huberman, professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford University. More specifically, they come from his two-hour podcast episode Focus Toolkit: Tools to Improve Your Focus & Concentration, which I highly recommend watching in its entirety.

 

Here are a few bullet-style tips to help you improve your focus: 

 

  • Binaural beats, at a frequency of 40 Hz, have shown to enhance focus and decrease the amount of time it takes to get into a focused state. Avoid using binaural beats for your entire focus period. Try using them for five minutes before you begin to focus or to reduce distraction in noisy environments. There are many apps or you can find binaural beats on YouTube for free.
  • Leverage your body’s natural ultradian rhythms and block out periods of about 90 minutes for intensely focused sessions. Don’t expect to enter into deep focus right away. It takes five to ten minutes to settle in. Towards the end, spend 10-30 minutes to deliberately defocus.
  • Try a cold shower to increase epinephrine and dopamine in the brain and body. This will help the body get into a focused state. The positive effects of epinephrine last up to an hour or more.
  • Regular meditation practice has shown to have proven benefits for our ability to focus. Huberman cites a study in which participants meditated, using a form of meditation called concentration meditation, for 13 minutes per day. These participants had measurably higher levels of focus compared to the control group who did not meditate. 
  • Using our visual field can improve focus. Set a timer for 30 seconds and focus on one object during this time. This is a good way to begin your 90-minute focus sessions.

 

The true importance of process focus 

 

When we contemplate the finite nature of life, as the Stoics prescribed, then we realize that treating certain actions as mere stepping stones to something greater plays right into something we are all trying to avoid: life passing us by. 

 

It is true that by dedicating ourselves fully to each action we actually perform better, but this is not the chief argument for doing so. We should strive to wash our dishes and do our laundry with deliberate care because these actions are life itself

 

Most imagery in mindfulness teachings shows us the sunset or the quiet moment with a loved one. But it’s critical to note that driving to work or taking out the trash are no less precious than the majesty of the setting sun or the connection of a family dinner. In fact, I would argue that these mundane or even unpleasant actions are where our mindfulness practice is most required.

Outcomes are obvious

 

You may think that letting go of the outcome will weaken you. By not having clear and constant reminders of your goals, you will not achieve them. But the thing about most outcomes is that they’re pervasive. Our society is practically constructed to give us constant reminders of who we need to be and where we need to go. Your work has built-in measures of success and performance reviews. Yes, you need plans and goals, but allow yourself to elaborate these with care and lightheartedness. Once you have a plan, you need not obsess over the outcome because it is always there. Thinking about the desired outcome won’t get you any closer to it, only the plethora of minor and mundane actions leading to it will. Nurturing these small acts not only yields better performance, but it affords us the preciousness of the present moment. 

The present moment is an evergreen opportunity 

 

Focusing on process over results, especially with the smallest of tasks, can amount to greater outcomes when we are not misguided by obsession over those outcomes. Approaching each action with care is a noble pursuit of life itself. Finally, fixating on an outcome can make us miss opportunities because our perspective is so narrow and confined to one rigid outcome. This narrow perspective of focusing solely on the outcome also stifles creativity and greatly restricts the ability to realize new possibilities and recognize opportunities. 

 

But perhaps the most powerful aspect of a given moment is that it represents an opportunity to reset. I’d like to end on this note, because this noble pursuit of granting care and attention to the ‘minor’ details in life will come with its setbacks. You will lose focus at times and you will find yourself working on the outcome instead of the task. When this happens, do not become frustrated. Simply notice that you’ve strayed from the path, smile, and refocus. This is why mindfulness and meditation are the key, as they teach us not to strive for unfaltering focus, but to enjoy the pursuit of focus—to recognize when we have lost focus and regain it promptly and without angst. 

 

“Life happens when we are busy making plans” – Allen Saunders

 

“The journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step” – Lao Tzu

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