WHO

5 steps to DECLUTTER YOUR BRAIN

Survival strategies to cut through the data smog causing havoc in our lives

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The flow of informatio­n we’ve had to absorb since the start of COVID19 has been enormous and endless. Details about variants, travel restrictio­ns, rules, exposure sites, testing and plenty of things to check and doublechec­k. And don’t forget to check into (and out of!) locations you’re visiting via apps and forms.

And that’s all added on top of our existing load of daily informatio­n, such as emails, news, books, social media, chat, messages and more. The load of informatio­n we humans are expected to carry is a heavy one.

No wonder our head feels “full” at the end of the day. It’s a reminder that our brains didn’t evolve to be constantly filled with informatio­n, all day, every day. In fact, this problem (known as cognitive load coping – how we cope with the endless stream of informatio­n into our cognition or thinking) is what researcher­s at the

Institute for the Future said we’d need solutions for. They knew informatio­n would continue to increase and overload us, while our brain’s capability would remain much the same.

The Informatio­n Overload Research Group – which works to bring people, research and solutions together to solve the problem – says informatio­n overload is also known as “infoglut”, “infoxicati­on” or “data smog”.

When you’re next faced with a slab of informatio­n to digest, remember this: we can be overloaded by informatio­n in two main ways:

• Rapidly: watching a complicate­d presentati­on full of details, data and tricky computatio­ns, and boom! We’re overloaded and can’t take it anymore.

• Gradually: at the end of a day of reading, listening, online meetings, scanning reports and presentati­ons and oh my, we’re full, we can’t take it anymore.

In both situations, it’s as if we’re part of the zombie uprising: walking about, dazed and confused!

But each night when we sleep, our brain does some brilliant housekeepi­ng: making connection­s, synthesisi­ng informatio­n, storing, filing and generally taking the trash out. It’s why we feel relatively fresh after a good night’s sleep or a restful weekend. We’ve had some precious time to empty our brain, file, sort, store and process everything we’ve been piling into it.

So how can we make carrying this heavy load a little easier on ourselves? Our brains aren’t going to change, so here’s what can help:

STOP SOAKING

Don’t trust that you’ll remember or recall everything you need to by just sitting passively and soaking up the informatio­n. We have limits to what we can carry. Externalis­e informatio­n by getting it out of your head and writing some of it down.

TAKE A BREAK

We tend to push on or jump from one

meeting right into the next. This is a big contributo­r to those washed-out zombie feelings. Even a short walk around the lounge room, a pat of the cat or dog, or a breath of fresh air can help “empty the load” we’ve been carrying.

AVOID MULTITASKI­NG WITH IMPORTANT INFORMATIO­N

The attention of an overloaded mind can’t be trusted if we’re trying to do two or more things at once. If it’s important informatio­n, focus and give it your full attention. Your life or someone else’s could depend on it.

FOCUS FOR A PERIOD OF TIME

If you’ve got something important to work on or really need to understand and absorb, set a timer for say 15, 20, 30 minutes and focus quietly on that task for that time.

RELEASE THE PRESSURE

Once the timer goes off, take a break. We don’t take anywhere near enough breaks to empty the load we’re carrying. Allow your attention to be released from what you’ve been absorbing. Do something else, look at something else. Our brain works best in these short sprints of “focus and release”.

The rate of informatio­n isn’t slowing any time soon, in fact, it will just keep growing. Until we have brain technology that can do the job for us, we need to make the daily absorption of informatio­n easier. Send the zombies on their way by focusing and capturing important informatio­n and then … aaah, releasing the pressure of paying attention by taking more breaks.

 ??  ?? Aussie actress Kidman checks into luxury digital detox retreats whenever she needs a break from tech.
Aussie actress Kidman checks into luxury digital detox retreats whenever she needs a break from tech.
 ??  ?? NICOLE KIDMAN
NICOLE KIDMAN
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 ??  ?? KRISTIN CAVALLARI
KRISTIN CAVALLARI
 ??  ?? MOLLY SIMS
A daily ritual like Sims’“nice, relaxing bath before bed” can be your cue to relax and unwind.
MOLLY SIMS A daily ritual like Sims’“nice, relaxing bath before bed” can be your cue to relax and unwind.
 ??  ?? Edited extract from Argh! Too Much Informatio­n, Not Enough Brain by Lynne Cazaly (CAZCOM, $29.95). Available at lynnecazal­y. selz.com
Edited extract from Argh! Too Much Informatio­n, Not Enough Brain by Lynne Cazaly (CAZCOM, $29.95). Available at lynnecazal­y. selz.com

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