Rapt: Attention and the Focused Life

Rapt: Attention and the Focused Life

3.4 of 5 stars 3.40  ·  rating details  ·  662 ratings  ·  142 reviews
A revolutionary look at how what we pay attention to determines how we experience life
Acclaimed behavioral science writer Winifred Gallagher's "Rapt" makes the radical argument that much of the quality of your life depends not on fame or fortune, beauty or brains, fate or coincidence, but on what you choose to pay attention to. "Rapt" introduces a diverse cast of charact...more
ebook, 256 pages
Published April 16th 2009 by Penguin Books
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Emma
What Daniel said.

I wanted specific strategies and suggestions for increasing the amount of time I spend in deep work (getting off Goodreads would probably be a good start). Instead I got a book of fluff and padding.

1.5 stars.
Deb
*Paying attention to your attention*

Completely rapt while reading this book at the gym, I was startled when the gym staff member alerted me that the gym was about to close. Apparently, I missed the announcement. Now, if that's not a convincing testimony for the captivating factor of this book, I'm not sure what is.

The basic premise of _Rapt_ is: "Your life--who you are, what you think, feel and do, what you love--is the sum of what you focus on." It not what happens to happens to you that matter...more
Cori
“Whenever you squander attention on something that doesn’t put your brain through its paces and stimulate change, your mind stagnates a little and life feels dull.” I couldn’t agree more, book! How often do we spend an afternoon mindlessly watching reruns and feel this way?

I heard about this book on the radio a while back. I’m guessing it was NPR, but I could be wrong. It’s been on my TBR list for a while, and after seeing it on the shelf at the library the other day, I thought I’d finally pick...more
Bonnie
Rapt caught my attention after reading an excerpt in the Utne Reader. The thesis was pretty straightforward – what you focus on determines your experience of life. I was intrigued because I had always struggled with paying quality attention to my children, ostensibly the focus of my work as a stay-at-home mother. I wanted to experience my life with them better, and I wanted something more than a simplistic parenting book that suggested setting aside 20 minutes of play without distraction each da...more
Mike
Winifred Gallagher’s Rapt: Attention and the Focused Life readily merits its readers’ sustained attention. Gallagher persuasively shows how whatever we focus on is—quite literally—how we spend our lives. Our attention, in other words, is like currency. So the ways we choose to spend it determine the caliber and character of our experience.

Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi introduced us to Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience in 1991. New developments in neuroscience have since revealed even more abo...more
Courtney
I'm disappointed that this book about attention was not, itself, more sharply focused. Instead of building towards a thesis or providing an organized survey of her theme, author Winifred Gallagher begins and ends "Rapt" with scattered essays that don't seem to be much about focus and attention at all.

The meat of the book is sandwiched in the middle, where the author guides the reader through the leading research on focus and attention. We learn that attention can be diffuse or focused, and ther...more
Maggie
overall this book was worth reading. many details review what is already known; some details are on recent research results on the brain and its ways and means of attention; many anecdotal elements were included and added to the chapters theses; a few thoughts were new and which i would not have otherwise known. overall a good book if you've got the spare time; otherwise, common sense can inform us almost as much as this book does.

but one thing it does do is to remind us how much our tech life...more
Clara
Rapt provides a survey of a wide breadth of research on attention, yet manages to obfuscate more than it reveals. In one chapter, attention and conscious experience are synonymous; in another, implicit learning is the apogee of well-directed attention. The author broaches claims with no substantive evidence, such as the idea that perpetual interactions in a multimedia context breed superficial brains. Such claims are bereft of the surveyed research because there is no research to back them up! G...more
Andrea
May 09, 2009 Andrea marked it as to-read  ·  review of another edition
interesting idea:
from a blog i follow:

"'Rapt’ Gains Attention from NYT

Are library buyers multitasking too much to keep track of Winifred Gallagher’s new book, Rapt: Attention and the Focused Life? It’s jumped to #26 on Amazon.com after a New York Times “Science” section story by John Tierney on “The Science of Concentration,” and by critic Laura Miller in Salon. Yet the libraries we checked showed low ordering (in some cases, no copies; in others, a single copy against 35 or more requests).

Galla...more
Weasel
This book is supposedly about attention. Sadly, the authors writing style is attention's kryptonite. I realize concision is a foolish thing to hope for in a pop-psych book. Were it not for examples, anecdotes, and round-about restatements, pop-psych and business books would not be books at all but pamphlets. Still if you want me to endure your wordy anecdotes and examples you'd better convince you've got something interesting to say first. And preferably something I haven't read before.

In addit...more
Gordon
This is a truly wonderful book. The author set out on this book-writing project in the aftermath of a major bout of cancer, seeking to turn her mind to something other than battling with disease. Her choice of theme is a fascinating one, which really takes her into the heart of the philosophical issue: can you choose your own life? Her answer is, yes indeed you can, by choosing what to turn your attention to. How to do that? Mindfulness-based meditation is, to her, the single most important way...more
Marsha
I really liked this book, and thank you to my sister Amy for recommending it. It made me think about how our lives are defined by what we pay attention to. Also, I appreciated the chapter on ADHD, since I see that a lot at work. A lot of the science in this book is also mentioned in Malcom Gladwell's Blink and Jonah Lehrer's How We Decide, but each of the books offers a different perspective.

I think decision making and focusing our attention are the challenges of our age. We have so much to cho...more
Bookmarks Magazine

Gallagher's fascinating book, which analyzes the latest research in psychology and neuroscience, easily translates difficult concepts into layman's terms. She includes contemporary and historical examples of men and women, including Mozart and Tiger Woods, whose ability to concentrate led to their successes. Gallagher's writing is engaging and accessible, and her suggestions for a more focused life range from the mystical (meditation) to the ordinary (separating oneself from distractions.) Criti

...more
Laura
This is a quick and pleasant read but ironically, given that the subject matter is attention, the author seems to flit from topic to topic often moving on just as things were starting to get really interesting. In cases where I'd read more about the original studies (e.g. the Joshua Bell busking experiment) I felt her summaries were superficial and misleading; this led me to question her versions of studies I was not familiar with. Similarly, she refers to "Asian culture" as if dozens of diverse...more
MsSmartiePants ...like the candy...
Could be my mindset, but the thoughts "uh, gotta slog through that new book before I can get another one...." and "uhg, don't like the reader.....overly clever writing....must finish, have to finish..." kept coming to mind. Who says I must slog through and finish before moving on? Oh, that was only me!

After listening to 3.1 (out of 7 or 8) CD's, I happily returned this book and checked out another. Not that I didn't learn anything. Well I didn't. I might have eventually. But I did gain some rei...more
John
You are what you pay attention to.

Winifred Gallagher was a mother of two young girls when she was diagnosed with a cancer that had a great chance of ending her life. Understandably, her mind was full of dread and terror that she would leave her girls motherless. Since she might be living her final days, she decided to focus on, and pay attention to, the things that gave her joy. Her children, a sunset, her family....

Her life changed. While she dealt with bad news on the medical front, she enjoy...more
Beth
Apr 29, 2010 Beth rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: those interested in how we tick, anyone looking for some guidance to getting on top of their life
Recommended to Beth by: Lifehacker.com
Shelves: liked, influential
There were certainly tidbits of new information, references to studies I hadn't heard of before, but the real win of this book was that it focused my attention toward a subject of interest to me, and got me to examine it far more closely than I have before. Yes, it was a bit of a recursive experience, focused reading and thinking about focus and attention. :)

I learned a lot about myself by *actively* reading this book, and got some insights into why I do certain things and how I might approach o...more
Joseph

In Rapt: Attention and the Focused Life the author, Winifred Gallagher, does an excellent job of covering the relevant neurological and psychological knowledge of how attention works. But I was hoping for more "attention" to the "Focused Life" part of the book's subtitle. Still, there is a lot of good stuff in the book.


Gallagher starts by explaining the latest research on how attention works. She notes that attention is regulated in two ways. Top down attention is regulated by your will. The oth

...more
Scott Key
This book has changed the way I work. Author Winifred Gallagher has marshaled quite a bit of research into fourteen chapters and has made it approachable with a good takeaway at the end of each chapter that can be integrated into several areas of life where attention is important. If you have read Malcolm Gladwell and John Medina, much of what you read here will not be new.

Gallagher learned about the power of attention for ill or for good when she was diagnosed with cancer and decided not to le...more
Jesse Wattenbarger
This was a hard book to rate. I didn't love it, but I didn't hate it. And, I love the subject matter. Gallagher isn't a bad writer, but the organization is weird and she is very repetitive. She wanders and often leaves you wanting more of the meaty bits instead of the fluffy bits that she offers up in spades. It isn't a bad read, though and the subject matter is very interesting. It's a short, easy read, even if just for a survey of the subject matter. You should read this if:

A. You have never r...more
Herb
Gallagher is a pretty clunky writer, but she's gotten hold of some pretty compelling cognitive research about the fact of attention, and how what we attend to changes our attitudes. I read one of her early books 15 years ago (The Power of Place), and that wasn't very good either. At least for this one, she's got stronger material to work with.

The fact is that we're all moving at full speed all the time, barely allowing our attention to land anywhere before flitting off again to the next shiny th...more
Michelle
I may not have given this book a fair shake trying to listen to the audiobook version. Around disk five of seven of *Rapt* I abandoned the book. This book reminded me a little of Martin Seligman's books about "Authentic Happiness." For Seligman, optimism was the answer to almost every human psychological ailment, and focused attention was Gallagher's panacea.

One contributing factor to losing my interest was that the author was perhaps too thorough with her coverage of the topic of attention. Fo...more
Darlene
A good reminder to pay attention to the things that make you happy. I particularly liked the descriptions of bottom-up and top-down attention. It has quite a bit of relatively new research in it, although having recently read the brain that changes itself and blink, there wasn't a great deal new for me. However I found it valuable to make me aware of my habitual mode of focussing and practical ways to control my attention. I might even try meditating. I'm not sure I agree that the state of rapt...more
Ronald Barba
I mean...I feel like everything covered in this book can be found in every other self-help book. I guess in this regard, it wasn't what I expected.

Key take-aways:

1) Get absorbed in whatever task is at hand, and try to battle distraction and boredom by further looking at your current project/work and try seeing it from a different perspective. Can you approach it in a more creative way?
1a) This "respondent" or "experiential" way of focus is the kind where vegan artists' balls drop after touchin...more
Summer Derrick
I just found this book at the library with no recommendations. I usually don't have a lot of success when I do this, but this time I actually found a winner. Although the book itself could have been more "focused" and better organized, I really loved the concepts provided. I felt like this book simplified a concept I read about in "A New Earth" by Eckhart Tolle, this author was also mentioned in the book.

As the author does, I feel like focus is the key to many of the things we do. Rather than a...more
Aaron
May 27, 2009 Aaron rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Aaron by: Salon.com
Like most people who read Rapt, I came to the book prehooked. I've never been much of an ace at focus – I was a poor student all the way through college, when I not so much snapped suddenly to attention as graduated to a curriculum based more on a few large tests than endless worksheets to be turned in on the hour – and I was suspected of ADHD more than once as a child and teen. Like many, I never really got a conclusive answer. I certainly didn't feel like I had an attention problem, just that...more
Ian Varley
This was a frustrating book. The core idea--that what you focus on determines who you become--is revolutionary. The execution of this book, on the other hand, is nearly awful. It reads like a distracted newspaper article, like a high school student trying to sound like Malcolm Gladwell. What could have been a fantastic 30 page essay was (presumably, due to the pressures of the pop-cognitive-psychology book industry of our time, which wants to churn out an endless stream of best-seller Tipping Po...more
Teri
I love the ideas in this book, which cull from others' original research in an easily digestible format. Some of the take-aways have been around for a while (meditation increases mindfulness), but others were new and insightful (more women succeed in school settings because of their built-in attention patterns). The author explores different flavors of attention and their work/life benefits -- both those we can work to enhance and those that still remain somewhat of a mystery. I find myself brin...more
Joe
This is a great book that covers the different angles of the idea of being present in what where you are and what you do. I like the tone because it strips the subject of the usual ornamental tags and frilly spiritual outfits that you normally get with this topic. But at the same time it is very readable and not clinical - a great balancing act for a topic like this.

It covers various areas such as mindfulness, meditation, Buddhism, psychology, philosophy, the medication nation, etc, and puts for...more
Annette
Okay, I just have to say it. This book hardly seemed 'groundbreaking ' to me. It's another self help book with some personal stories. If you are in a tough situation, read this book in tiny bites to help you along... it will.

Don't drag all that baggage around. Put your past ( in my case childhood was 60 (!) years ago and a painful divorce 30 years ago ), put it in the corner and get on with life. Yes, focus on the good, yes be positive, yes seek out like minded and supportive friends, then relax...more
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Rapt: Attention and the Focused Life (Hardcover)
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“Temperamentally anxious people can have a hard time staying motivated, period, because their intense focus on their worries distracts them from their goals.” 60 people liked it
“People who are diagnosed as having "generalized anxiety disorder" are afflicted by three major problems that many of us experience to a lesser extent from time to time. First and foremost, says Rapgay, the natural human inclination to focus on threats and bad news is strongly amplified in them, so that even significant positive events get suppressed. An inflexible mentality and tendency toward excessive verbalizing make therapeutic intervention a further challenge.” 21 people liked it
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