Indistractable: How to Control Your Attention and Choose Your Life

by Nir Eyal

November 26, 2025

Time management is pain management—master internal triggers, timebox your values, hack back external triggers, and use pacts to become indistractable.

"Time management is pain management. When we get distracted, we're not seeking pleasure—we're seeking relief from psychological discomfort."

Insight

Eyal reframes distraction through the lens of intent: traction pulls you toward what you want, while distraction pulls you away from what you planned.


Key Insight: Action isn't judged by the activity itself but by intent. Checking email can be traction (if scheduled) — or distraction (if avoiding discomfort).


🎯 The Real Enemy

Not technology — but internal triggers: boredom, anxiety, uncertainty, fatigue, loneliness.


💡 Most Productivity Advice Fails Because...

It treats the symptom (notifications) instead of the disease (discomfort).


🧭 The Four-Part Framework

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Reflection

🧠 We've Been Sold a False Narrative

That willpower is a finite battery. That technology controls us. That distraction is inevitable.

Eyal dismantles all of this.


⚡ Willpower Only Runs Out if You Believe It Does

Technology isn't inherently evil — it's neutral.

The issue isn't distraction. It's that we haven't defined what we want to be distracted from.


📅 If Your Calendar Is Blank, Everything Becomes Traction

Evolution designed us to be dissatisfied. Restlessness keeps us alive — contentment doesn't.

"This isn't a flaw to fix — it's a feature to understand."

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When we see distraction as escape from discomfort, we can treat the cause, not the symptom.

Practice

Key Takeaways


1. Master Internal Triggers

When you feel the urge to distract yourself, pause and identify the discomfort (boredom? anxiety? uncertainty?). Use ACT techniques: look for the discomfort, write it down in a distraction tracker, then "surf the urge" using the 10-minute rule—wait 10 minutes before giving in, and usually the wave of desire will subside.

Reimagine boring tasks by finding variability and micro-challenges.

"Labels like 'easily distracted' or having an 'addictive personality' give permission to fail."

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2. Make Time for Traction

Migrate from to-do lists → timeboxing.

Use zero-based calendaring—every minute should be accounted for, including sleep, meals, and "nothing time." Fill your calendar in this order: Domain 1 (You—self-care), Domain 2 (Relationships—schedule recurring gatherings), Domain 3 (Work—distinguish reactive vs. reflective work).

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3. Hack Back External Triggers