"The
pseudo-worker looks and feels like someone who is
working hard—he or she spends a long time in the
library and is not afraid to push on late into the night—but, because of a lack of focus and concentration,
doesn’t actually accomplish much. This bad habit is
endemic on most college campuses. For example,
at Dartmouth there was a section of the main library
that was open twenty-four hours a day, and the
students I used to see in there late at night huddled
in groups, gulping coffee and griping about their
hardships, were definitely pseudo-working. The
roommate who flips through her chemistry notes on
the couch while watching TV is pseudo-working. The
guy who brings three meals, a blanket, and six-pack
of Red Bull to the study lounge in preparation for an
all-day paper-writing marathon is also pseudo-working. By placing themselves in distracting
environments and insisting on working in long
tedious stretches, these students are crippling their
brain’s ability to think clearly and efficiently
accomplish the task at hand. The result is fatigue
headaches and lackluster outcomes.
The bigger problem here is that most students
don’t even realize that they’re pseudo-working. To
them pseudo-work is work—it’s how they’ve always
done it, and it’s how all of their friends do it. It never
crosses their mind that there might be a better way."
Cal Newport
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