FocusMindset

You’re Not Behind — You’re Just Distracted

There is no cosmic race and nobody is keeping score. There is only your attention, which has been on loan to six different apps, and a timeline full of other people's highlight reels. This post is a reality check for every 22-year-old convinced they are "behind": you are roughly five hours of real focus a day away from "on track," the clock is in your head, and the distraction is in your phone. Two fixes work — pick one thing per quarter, and make the apps genuinely hard to open. You do not need a new identity. You need fewer tabs.

Siddharth PuriMarch 30, 20267 min read
Motivation & Reality

You’re Not Behind — You’re Just Distracted

March 30, 2026 · 7 min read · Siddharth Puri

There is no cosmic race and nobody is keeping score. There is only your attention, which has been on loan to six different apps, and a timeline full of carefully curated highlight reels from people you would not actually want to swap lives with. That feeling of being "behind" is not a fact about your life. It is a symptom of where your attention has been going.

The "behind" illusion

Every 22-year-old thinks they are behind. Some 18-year-olds think they are behind. The feeling is almost entirely manufactured by social media showing you the top 1% of people your age — founders, athletes, prodigies, trust-fund kids — and presenting that as the baseline.

If you compare yourself to a curated slice of the extreme, you will lose by default. That is not a problem with your life. That is a problem with the comparison.

What "on track" actually means

Five hours of real focused work a day, for ten years, builds almost any career. Five. Not twelve. Not ridiculous. Five.

Most people do not get five hours of real focus a day. They get two. The other ten hours of their workday are a mix of meetings, Slack, Twitter, email, fake productivity, and recovery from all of the above. If you can quietly produce five real hours while your peers produce two, you will look like a prodigy by age 30. No special talent required.

The two fixes that actually work

  • Pick one thing for the quarter. Literally one. Not five. Not "learn AI, ship a product, get fit, start a side business, write a book." One
  • Make it uncomfortable to check the apps — delete them from your phone, sign out, move them to the third screen, install blockers. The friction matters more than the discipline

The "one thing" rule

Focus is zero-sum. Every goal you add divides your attention. If you are trying to do five things, you are doing each of them at 20% intensity, which is below the threshold where meaningful progress happens.

Pick one thing for a quarter. Give it 80% of your creative energy. Let the other things coast. At the end of the quarter, you will have actual progress on one thing and mild regression on the others. That is a massive win. Compound it over ten quarters and you have transformed.

The friction rule

Willpower is a limited resource and you will run out. The answer is not "be more disciplined." The answer is to make the bad option genuinely harder to pick.

  • Delete the app, do not just mute it. You will reinstall less often than you'd reopen
  • Put your phone in another room during focus blocks, not face-down on the desk
  • Use a separate device for work, no personal apps
  • Log out of social media on your laptop. Logging back in takes 30 seconds, which is 30 seconds too long for most impulses
  • Grayscale your phone. Bright colours are designed to capture attention

What changes when you do this

Within two weeks, you notice you are bored more often. This is good. Boredom is the precursor to creative thought. We have trained it out of ourselves with constant stimulation.

Within a month, your focus blocks get longer. Within three months, you are producing output your past self would have found impressive. Within a year, you are the person other people think is "ahead."

You did not become more talented. You just got your attention back.

A word on the comparison trap

You will still sometimes feel behind. You are going to see someone your age who has done something impressive and feel the pang. The pang is unavoidable. What matters is what you do in the next hour.

You can scroll for another 45 minutes feeling worse. Or you can close the app and do 45 minutes of real work on your one thing. The pang goes away both ways. Only one of them builds a life.

Behind is just a story. Distracted is a habit. Habits change.

You do not need a new identity. You do not need a new morning routine. You do not need to read more productivity books. You need five real hours a day. Guard them.

All postsSiddharth Puri

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