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Musk: What Truly Kills Your Thinking is Frequent Task Switching
In a podcast episode, the female host asked Musk about his daily life, and he candidly admitted to receiving massive volumes of communication messages every day.
Given his work intensity, the word "massive" seems almost understated.
This naturally raises curiosity: facing such a relentless onslaught of information, how does Musk accomplish enormous amounts of work while maintaining efficiency several times greater than ordinary people?
His answer was concise and powerful:
"I need to prioritize information by filtering it, dividing my day into several time blocks to reduce frequent task switching. Because what truly kills thinking is never fear or pressure, but task switching itself. When your inbox is flooded with emails, it's hard for attention not to be constantly pulled in different directions; imagine switching work tasks every 30 seconds—the drain on attention would be staggering."
I've carefully studied Musk's biography and related business research, summarizing his highly efficient work method—research comparing project timelines between his companies and competitors found that his annual workload is nearly 8 times that of his peers:
First, we must understand: the human brain is a single-core processor.
Unlike electronic devices, the human brain cannot truly process multiple tasks in parallel. What's called "multitasking" is essentially high-frequency switching between different tasks, not simultaneous operation like smartphones running multiple programs.
Take task switching costs as an example:
When jumping from one thing to another, the brain experiences a brief pause, a process averaging 0.1-0.2 seconds. Though seemingly brief, it continuously consumes time and energy while weakening memory retention. This is also why checking your phone while driving is extremely dangerous—when switching back from the phone to driving, "brain blank" can last up to 0.7 seconds.
Second, Musk's core secret is precisely focused organization.
His concept of "dividing the day into several time blocks" is specifically the practice of "focused organization":
Plan tasks before starting the workday, allocating the most important things to fixed time blocks by priority, clearly defining start and end times—like locking tasks into separate boxes, opening only one at a time, allowing focus to drive efficient output.
In "Musk's Biography," it mentions that he and top talents in his team all share this characteristic:
Musk is never alone, but rather a highly focused, efficient team. Once they commit to something, they completely block out other distractions, rather than doing one thing while thinking about another.
In contrast, most people do exactly the opposite—while working on what's in front of them, they're still worried about unfinished tasks, trapping their brains in meaningless frequent switching.
Finally, I once heard a partner from a top investment firm share that when starting his career, he was swamped with work and asked the company founder for advice. The senior told him there were only two important things: Focus and Priority.
It seems the underlying logic of all efficient people is universal.