Really, MULTITASKING Just DOESN'T Work! True, some days we feel like a master multitasker even as we drink our cup of coffee in the morning and catching up with emails and browsing with no end jumping from one social media platform to another. BUT again, time and again, experts have been telling us that MULTITASKING just DOESN'T work, period. WHY? Because we're all wired to be mono-taskers dude!@#$%?
Several times in my daily morning operations call, often I share my screen and sometimes, I'll request my team member to share his/her screen and voila, I CAN'T stop asking, WHY he/she got tons and tons of Excel tabs concurrently open [and it's not even 900am, whew!]. YES, this is the truth. Even WHEN we think we're MULTITASKING, most often we AREN'T really doing two things at once. BUT instead, we're doing individual actions in rapid succession OR task-switching. In fact, studies show that generally, just around 2.5% of people are able to MULTITASK effectively💥💥💥
YES, here's a post-mortem conclusion: MULTITASKING can hinder our performance. Studies have shown that WHEN our brain is constantly switching gears to bounce back and forth between tasks [especially WHEN those tasks are complex and require our active attention], we then become less efficient and MORE likely to make a mistake. This might NOT be as apparent OR impactful WHEN we're doing tasks that are simple and routine, like listening to music while walking, or folding laundry while watching TV💚💛💜
BUT WHEN the stakes are higher and the tasks are more complex, trying to MULTITASK can negatively impact our lives. YES dude, that MULTITASKING does divide our attention. It makes it harder for us to give our full attention to one thing. For example, in one study, attempting to complete additional tasks during a driving simulation led to poorer driving performance. Other studies even led to scarier results which suggest that people WHO frequently "MEDIA-MULTITASK" [like listening to music while scrolling through social media are more distracted and less able to focus their attention😗😗😗
Our takeaway: Besides talking about all these, a pitfall NOT so obvious is that trying to do too much at once makes it harder for us to be mindful and TRULY PRESENT in the moment. Have you either experienced OR witnessed someone talking to another one who keeps scrolling through social media and gives perfunctory remarks like 'A-OK' OR 'REALLY'' OR 'YES'? Likely they DON'T sincerely mean it because their attention gets divided by that MULITASKING. Let's just stop that dude❗❗❗