Bring Back Focus

Dipesh Jain

Manage your attention. Stay focused. Achieve your goals. bringbackfocus.substack.com

  1. We Are All in a Daze

    JAN 7

    We Are All in a Daze

    Episode Description We talk a lot about distraction and phone addiction.But what if that is not the real problem? In this episode, I share a moment from a late train ride that changed how I think about attention. What I observed was not people “using” their phones, but something quieter and more unsettling: attention being passively handed over to algorithms. This conversation is about algorithm-led attention, absence rather than addiction, and why noticing this pattern might be the most important first step toward reclaiming focus. What You’ll Hear in This Episode A late train ride that triggered a shift in how attention was perceived Why passive scrolling is different from intentional phone use The idea of algorithm-led attention and why it matters Why this feels less like addiction and more like absence How this pattern quietly becomes the default mode Why awareness, not willpower, is the real starting point Episode Timestamps 00:00 to 01:40 The train ride and choosing not to reach for the phone 01:40 to 03:50 Observing passive scrolling in real time 03:50 to 06:30 Absence versus addiction 06:30 to 08:45 Noticing the pattern in yourself 08:45 to end Awareness as the only real starting point About Bring Back Focus Bring Back Focus is a podcast about attention, clarity, and learning to think deeply again in a world designed to keep you distracted. If this episode resonated, you’ll find deeper essays and reflections at bringbackfocus.substack.com Subscribe there to continue the conversation. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit bringbackfocus.substack.com

    10 min
  2. The Productivity System That Finally Stuck

    10/26/2025

    The Productivity System That Finally Stuck

    Description After clearing the digital clutter, the next question is simple: what system should I use now? In this episode of Bring Back Focus, I talk about why most productivity systems don’t stick and how the best system isn’t the most efficient one, but the one that feels natural. I share my own experiments with digital notebooks, a friend’s custom AI setup, and the simple test I use to know if my system is right for me. This episode is about building a focus system that feels calm, personal, and sustainable, not perfect. Episode Highlights 00:00 – Introduction: How too many tools create noise instead of clarity. 00:31 – Why most systems don’t last: We copy methods that don’t fit how our brain works. 01:13 – My failed attempts: From Notion dashboards to color-coded calendars, nothing felt right. 01:52 – The realization: It wasn’t laziness. It was misalignment. 02:08 – Efficiency vs. fluency: Why the best system feels natural, not optimized. 02:22 – My setup today: Using a Remarkable tablet to slow down and think clearly. 03:04 – The Big Three habit: Writing three key priorities every morning before work. 03:44 – A friend’s custom system: How he used Lovable and ChatGPT to design a to-do app that fits his brain. 04:44 – The lesson: Both analog and AI tools can work if they feel natural. 05:32 – How to build your own system: Analyze your best workdays and find patterns that make you productive. 07:25 – The feel test: If your system makes you anxious, it’s not yours. 08:04 – Common mistakes: Over-designing, over-tracking, and copying influencers. 09:22 – Stick with it: Consistency matters more than the tool itself. 10:00 – Closing thoughts: A good system should calm you down and feel like second nature. Actionable Advice Start simple: Begin with pen and paper or a single list. Use the feel test: If it feels heavy, simplify it. Personalize, don’t copy: Borrow the logic, not the layout. Reflect weekly: Notice whether your system feels easier or forced. Stay consistent: Don’t switch tools every few days. Favorite Quote: "A good system should calm you down and work for you, not pressurize you." This is a public episode. To join the conversation or read more, visit bringbackfocus.substack.com. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit bringbackfocus.substack.com

    11 min
  3. The Hidden Cost of Too Many Tools

    10/21/2025

    The Hidden Cost of Too Many Tools

    We live in a time where every week brings a new app that promises to make us more productive. Yet somehow, we end up feeling busier and less in control. In this episode of Bring Back Focus, Dipesh shares a personal story of how using too many tools made him less effective and more distracted. He talks about the simple reset that helped him get back to clarity and what he learned from deleting most of his apps. This episode is about how real focus begins when you simplify your digital world and stop chasing the next tool. Episode Highlights 00:00 – IntroductionWhy we keep adding tools and how it often makes things worse. 00:45 – The excitement of new appsThat familiar feeling of “this one will fix everything.” 01:20 – The reality checkHow juggling five tools led to less progress and more stress. 02:25 – The breaking pointA simple task that became chaos because of too many apps. 03:45 – The resetDeleting more than half of all tools and starting from scratch. 04:50 – What changedLess friction, fewer distractions, and more calm. 05:35 – The real lessonProductivity doesn’t come from more tools but from clarity. 06:25 – A small challengeList every tool you use and ask what would truly break if you deleted half. 07:00 – Closing thoughtsDigital minimalism is about being intentional, not extreme. Actionable Advice Simplify:Keep only the tools that you use daily and remove the rest. Choose One Space to Work:Pick one app for creating and one for communication. Turn Off Notifications:Decide when to check apps instead of letting them interrupt you. Reflect Weekly:Ask yourself which tools helped and which ones added noise. Keep It Human:Choose tools because they make your work easier, not because they are popular. Favorite Quote "When you’re unclear, you collect. When you’re clear, you delete." This is a public episode. To join the conversation or read more, visit bringbackfocus.substack.com. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit bringbackfocus.substack.com

    7 min
  4. 5 Steps to Design and Protect Your Thinking Time

    10/16/2025

    5 Steps to Design and Protect Your Thinking Time

    Following up on the science of thinking time, this episode dives into the practical steps you can take to design, protect, and maximize your own "Thinking Blocks." Learn why thinking time is often neglected and how a simple shift in perspective can transform it from a luxury to a powerful leverage point that drives the quality of every decision and idea in your life. Key Takeaways Shift your mindset: Think of thinking as real work, not "free time" or a luxury. The 5 steps are: Schedule it, create the right environment, use a gentle prompt, protect the space, and reflect and revisit your notes. Start small: Block two 30-minute sessions per week to begin. Focus on discovery: The time is for capturing thoughts and boosting quality, not for efficiency or immediate execution. Timestamps & Episode Highlights 01:47 Why Thinking Time Is Ignored: The main reason people skip it is because it provides no visible output in the short run, making it hard to defend in a metrics-driven world. The solution is to view it as real work that pays off over time. 03:19 Step 1: Schedule It and Be Rigid: Block time on your calendar and treat it as non-negotiable. Start with two 30-minute sessions and clearly label it as "Thinking Time" or "Clarity Block." 04:15 Step 2: Create the Right Environment: Eliminate all distractions, including notifications and devices. Go to a specific location that signals to your brain it’s time to think, and always take a notebook to capture your thoughts. 05:43 Step 3: Have a Gentle Prompt Ready: Use a flexible, open-ended question for your session (e.g., What am I not seeing clearly?) instead of a rigid to-do list. Use one question per session. 07:38 Step 4: Protect It Like a Sacred Space: Do not allow emails, pings, meetings, or reschedules to interrupt your block. This space is sacred and non-negotiable. 07:54 Step 5: Reflect and Revisit: At the end of the week, open your notebook and look for patterns in your notes. This reflection step is crucial for turning captured thoughts into valuable ideas. Follow Bring Back Focus on bringbackfocus.substack.com for more episodes and show notes! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit bringbackfocus.substack.com

    9 min

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Manage your attention. Stay focused. Achieve your goals. bringbackfocus.substack.com