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We used to think we might have ADHD, and in fact we even got diagnosed with it a few years ago (after a serious investigation), but we no longer believe we have it, or at least it has lost its explanatory value. Instead we see a battle for our attention we're slowly winning…

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What we have had a problem with, and continue to have a problem with, is habitually seeking distractions. I don't think we tend to do this while sitting down with a real-world task these days, but when at a computer or on our phone, it is tempting to <Ctrl-T>youtube⏎ for example

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Twitter is no longer engaging enough to function well as a distraction, but there are websites that we can seriously question why we regularly visit. Hacker News is one. YouTube is another, if we visit it without a clear purpose in mind. And we read the (national) news too often.

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Then there is the fact that seeking distractions is a behavioural loop you get stuck in. Websites with algorithmic recommendations are of course optimised to try to put you in it and make it harder to escape. We used to periodically block YouTube in /etc/hosts for this reason.

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Perhaps all of this is just an attempt at describing an ADHD coping strategy.

I don't want to sound like we've totally solved our problems, because this was prompted by realising this was yet another weekday where we sat down at our desk to use the computer and got nothing done.

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But the thing we've realised is that there's a specific pattern here that we can work with. “Sitting at our desk, using the computer” used to be our default activity for our free time. We also used to regret how so many hours of our life would get wasted. These aren't unrelated.

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