Książka Pomodoro Technique Reid Mercer

Pomodoro Technique

The Proven Way to Focus in Short, Unbreakable Bursts - and Actually Finish in the Age of AI and Endless Distraction

Autor: Reid Mercer
Język: Angielski
Oprawa: Miękka
Dostępność: Dostępna u dostawcy
Wysyłamy za 9-15 dni
54.26
You sit down at 9:14 with one thing to do. By 9:41 you have touched eleven things and finished none...

Informacje o książce

Autor
Język
Angielski
Oprawa
Książka - Miękka
Data wydania
2026
strony
116
EAN
9798183541120
Enbook ID
52994871
Waga
152
Wymiary
152 x 229 x 7

Pełny opis

You sit down at 9:14 with one thing to do. By 9:41 you have touched eleven things and finished none of them. This is not a character flaw. You have an ordinary human attention span, and you are trying to work inside an environment built, with great skill and budget, to take that attention a few seconds at a time.

You may have met the Pomodoro Technique already and dismissed it. Most people have. You heard set a 25-minute timer, tried it once on a quiet day, and forgot it by the end of the week. That is a quarter of the method, tried once. This book teaches the whole system, and is honest about what the evidence does and does not show.

Reid Mercer treats focus as a skill you can train, not a willpower contest you keep losing. No hype, no shaming, no promises that cannot be kept. Where the science is solid you hear it in plain English, with the researcher named; where it is thin, you hear that too.

What you'll learn:

  • How to run a single focused sprint and why a pomodoro that you abandon does not count
  • A simple protocol for interruptions, internal and external, that protects the sprint
  • How to plan a real day in pomodoros and close the gap between estimate and actual
  • Breaks that genuinely restore attention instead of draining it further
  • How to tune the interval to your own mind, because 25 minutes is a starting point, not a law
  • How to apply the method to studying, knowledge work, and bounding your AI tools to one task

The promise is not a transformed life in thirty days. It is something steadier: the ability to hold one hard thing in mind, deliberately, in a world built to fracture you. When machines handle the routine output, sustained attention becomes the rare edge, and a skill like that compounds.

Part of the Proven Methods series by Reid Mercer.