Achieving deep work requires intention - Deepstash
Achieving deep work requires intention

Achieving deep work requires intention

There are four strategies for achieving deep work:

  1. Monastic approach- this is eliminating all sources of distraction and secluding yourself like a monk.
  2. Bimodal approach- this is setting a clearly defined, long period of seclusion for work and leaving the rest of our time open for anything else.
  3. Rhythmic approach- this approach is about forming a habit of doing deep work for blocks of  ~90 minutes and using a calendar to track your accomplishments.
  4.  Journalistic strategy- this one has you doing deep work in any unexpected free time in your daily routine.

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I'm a writer obsessed with sharing new ideas in the areas of mindset, personal development, self-help, procrastination, productivity, writing, organization, and health & fitness

Deep work is an important con ept to use to maximize productivity.

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Depth Philosophies

Depth Philosophies

  1. Monastic Philosophy - attempts to maximize deep efforts by eliminating shallow obligations.
  2. Bimodal Philosophy - divide your time, dedicating some clearly defined stretches to deep pursuits and leaving the rest open to everything else.

The Four Deep Work Philosophies

The Four Deep Work Philosophies

Newport identifies four distinct approaches to integrating deep work into your professional life:

  1. The Monastic Philosophy: Eliminating or radically minimizing shallow obligations (Example: Donald Knuth, who has no email)
  2. The Bimodal Philosophy

4 philosophies to integrate Deep Work into your life

  • Monastic: maximize Deep Work by minimizing or removing shallow obligations. Isolate yourself for long periods of time without distractions; no shallow work allowed
  • Bimodal: divide your time into some clearly defined stretches to deep pursuits and leave the rest open to ...

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