Showing posts with label media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label media. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Stop fiddling with that 2nd screen! And SEE what you're missing.


"... multitasking people not only perform
each task less suitably, but lose time in the process." 

Multitasking with Media: Challenging the Behavior


If the content you're watching seems flat and unengaging maybe it's you! What are you bringing to the experience? After all, you gotta engage your brain and your eyes and your ears and get on board for the full ride if you want to get the most out of what media creators have put together for you. 

Think about it: Actors, directors, editors and all sorts of creative team members have carefully crafted a finished media product they can be proud of and that will give you a powerful experience. Yet you sit there fiddling with your device, missing half or more of what they created. What a waste!! (And, BTW, you're probably paying good money for that streaming service you're half ignoring to play with your tablet! What kinda economic sense does that make?)

While you're playing with that hand-held device, the media visuals, like actors' raised eyebrows or rolled eyes or subtle smirks and grins or beautifully-framed vistas, go completely unnoticed. So if your "watching" experience feels unsatisfying it's likely because you're choosing to engage it superficially and miss half of it! 

But "I'm great at multitasking!" you say? Not so! Multitasking is a myth... It's really just fast task switching, resulting in doing several things half-assed! And in doing so, you never reach that satisfying flow state that comes from full immersion in an experience.

So why not just relax, lay that phone or tablet down and disappear into that carefully-crafted media experience you're paying for?

Go deeper.

  • Managing Chronic Multitaskers - This is a fairly deep dive into the myth of multitasking and its futility from a project management perspective. It includes practical suggestions for project managers.

Get clinical.

  • Clinical overviews of smartphone overuse describe higher cortisol from frequent interruptions, more anxiety, and dependence on the device as an emotional regulator.  More here. 
  • Some neurology clinics describe patterns labeled “digital dementia,” where chronic multitasking and rapid information shifts are associated with shorter attention spans, memory complaints, and increased mental fatigue.  More here.  
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* Thank you, ChatGPT, for creating the custom image above for me based solely on my verbal description!

Friday, March 20, 2020

Bored passively consuming content? Feeling anxious? Maybe it's time to create something!



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“Get busy. Keep busy… Your blood will start circulating; your mind will start ticking, and pretty soon this whole positive upsurge of life in your body will drive worry from your mind.”  - Dale Carnegie
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How much Netflix, YouTube, Facebook, Instagram & news can you consume?!


As I write this, the vast majority of my fellow Americans -- indeed, people from all over the world -- have been stopped in their tracks by the COVID-19 pandemic. We've been asked to stay home from our jobs and schools, stop eating in restaurants or bars and generally avoid participating in any kind of real-world groups in order to help stop the spread of this horrible and deadly disease. We're asked to maintain "social distancing" on our essential trips out for supplies and to practice "self-isolation" at home.

Fortunately, in our internet connected world, we can stay safely in touch with each other online. And, what's more, we can pass hours and hours every day consuming unlimited stuff from 24/7 news outlets, Netflix, YouTube, Amazon Prime, Facebook, Instagram, etc.  But there is a limit to how much time you can spend zoned out on media and messages created by other people! Eventually you'll experience the mental equivalent of eating 10 bags of potato chips in one sitting. At first it seems fun to indulge, but you soon hit a wall when you realize that stuffing yourself isn't all that satisfying! (In fact, too much passive media watching has been associated with depression!)

Maybe it's time to create something.


Human beings are naturally creative. Give a kid a box of crayons and she'll create a picture. Give another kid a kazoo and he'll invent a song. We tell stories, we invent solutions to problems that are bothering us, we explore and learn new things so we can create more stuff. Some mystics and philophers go so far as to say that the act of creation taps into a universal Source energy which then flows through us, putting us in touch with the infinite. Whatever the roots of our creative experience, there's something deeply satisfying about bringing forth something that did not exist before. And that satisfaction is WAY deeper than anything we can experience binge-watching melodramas and cat videos!

So if you find yourself on lockdown at home, why not call on your inherent creativity (yes... it's really there whether you are using it or not...) and create something new?

Just do it!


Here are some examples of home-based projects that could get your creative juices flowing and result in something that would bring you satisfaction and other people enjoyment:



Bonus Materials: A Couple of Pep Talks for the Creatively Challenged


If you feel a bit hesitant to jump right into that creative project, maybe a quick pep talk (in essay form) might help.  In my book, Worth Sharing: Essays & Tools to Help Project Managers and Their Teams, I include a couple that might help you get unstuck. You can download them via the links below as PDFs.  Or you can read them here, in the free online version of the book.  Enjoy!

Why You Should Trust Your Judgment (Your Inner "Wisdom Filter)


Are you afraid that your creative output won't matter? ... that it's not really worth anything? This essay will prove to you that you have much wisdom and that you can trust that wisdom to be valuable, grasshopper!

PDF:  Why You Should Trust Your Judgment (Your Inner "Wisdom Filter)


Leveraging Inspiration: 10 Simple Practices to Keep Your Creative Output Flowing


This practical essay will show you 10 specific things you can do to catch all those flashes of inspiration before they get away so you can pull them together later into something wonderful.  Get the PDF here. Or simply read the chapter in my Worth Sharing book online.

Video Bonus


Finally, consider this little video: Time & Space to Blossom. I created it a few years ago for absolutely no reason. It was fun to build and it makes me happy when I watch it. Enjoy!


Related Articles from the Archives

Wednesday, December 26, 2018

The Best of 2018: Seven Posts Worth a Second Look



I began 2018 with the hard (and tedious!) work of moving all my websites to Google's Blogger platform.  (It's a long story... But the move was necessary due to relentless and expensive-to-defend-against attacks by hackers at my old hosting service.) Finally, after the dust settled in April, I was able to gather my energy for creating some new posts.

Looking back over the year, I am proud to say that this new WORTH SHARING website has produced some reasonably good stuff. The following seven posts are the best of the year. You'll find reviews of some simple, useful tools, as well as a couple of meatier posts that will challenge you or shift your perspective. Enjoy! 

Friday, August 31, 2018

Reality Check: Practical Tools for Finding the Truth



Our Own Set of Facts? 


Those of us who live in democracies are facing a couple of crucial questions: Are we going to keep allowing ourselves to be "played" against each other by sophisticated hacker-propagandists who distort our reality with cherry-picked half-truths and outright lies? Or will we take responsibility for finding verifiable truths so we can make good decisions as well-informed voters?