What methods are you using outside of avoiding social media?
Thank you for ... oh what's that over there?
I use the Pomodoro technique. I work for 25 minutes and then take a 5 minute break. My 25 minute stretch of work is actual work - no looking at my phone, the NY Times, or Twitter. Then my break is an actual break. I'll leave my office, sit on TikTok or walk around my yard.
I use noise canceling headphones and listen to electronic music or make a nice blend of white noise on Noisli.com
I block off my calendar for 4 hours at a time so I'm not disrupted by meetings. I close my Slack/Teams/Email apps. I put my phone in a different room.
These all work for me, but I found them through trial and error. Keep trying stuff until you find something that works for you. Good luck! And remember to not be so hard on yourself.
First lesson of meditation is that you can't prevent random stuff from popping into your head, but you can practice refocusing as soon as you notice
Just exist in silence. Let your thoughts wander and observe. It works wonders and I'm currently doing it on my commutes, on runs and walks, and at home.
When something doesn't involve a computer, I don't have the slightest problem staying focused. So when part of my job requires doing some maths on a piece of paper/window/whatever, when I want to read a book, when I engage in a hobby etc., I don't need to try hard to focus. It's only those bloody computers.
[0] https://open.spotify.com/playlist/0vvXsWCC9xrXsKd4FyS8kM
The same is true for my physical space, for me a messy room and desk is distracting.
Not fair to expect high performance at work if your mind and body aren’t being well taken care of. There’s no shortcuts, unfortunately.
I also use Pomodoro timer. It works well with me. Without Pomodoro, I can do really focused work for maybe two hours a day max.
With Pomodoro, that increases to five, sometimes (very rarely) six hours a day.
I listen to music. Especially Bach. I cannot not do some good work when I am listening to that good music. It's just me, I know.
I exercise 4/5 times a week (~30 minutes a session). It really helps with mood, energy, and concentration. I am sure this is not placebo.
I meditate for 30-45 minutes each night. Without fail. Significantly improves concentration, focus. Meditating has made me realize, for the first time in my life- what I actually want with my life. I am much more calm, composed, and relaxed.
Routine helps and so does timeboxing. Doing specific things at specific physical places at specific time- and having set time- that helps immenesely. So, it's not JUST pomodoro, but timeblocking + time-tracking w/ pomodoro.
I also learned from Deep Work to have clear work-life boundary. Made my life much better. I turn off from work at a certain time. Knowing that I will have to stop working at that time makes me more focused as well. Where blurry or non-existent boundary b/w work and life makes you think you can slack " now" and work "later". Happened with me.
I am trying time-logging now. Too much friction, but I am sticking with it.
I am still bad with interactive decisions in my life, like providing in-place answer, seeing into several steps into the future, etc. I was always considered very intelligent, but an average person could always wipe the chess-board with me. I want to master Chess. I think it will fill a gap in my life. Surprisingly, Factorio has been a blessing. It improves my thinking, and I plan to play it more.
GTD method did not work well for me. I guess it is more geared towards suits, MBAs, managers, etc. Not for intellectual knowledge workers working on the cutting-edge.
Two books that immensely helped-
1. Deep Work by Cal Newport
2. Pragmatic Thinking and Learning by Andy Hunt
Two books for meditation-
1. -The Mind Illuminated* by Culadasa et. al.
2. Mindfulness in Plain English by Bhante Henepola Gunaratana
Learning about Buddhism and Buddha's teachings have also made me an overall better human. I would recommend What The Buddha Taught by Walpola Rahula.
Remember that reaching peak focus is a trial-and-error experiment that lasts for months or years. Many habits that I have today- I found them through deliberate, vigilant trial and error. Keep with it. Answers for different people are likely different.
Btw, also listen to Huberman Lab Podcast.