How to Focus While Working From Home: Sharpen Your Mind
If the ongoing [**work-from-home experiment**](https://www.taskade.com/blog/work-from-home-where-is-it-heading/) had a tagline, this quoteâerroneously attribute...
If the ongoing work-from-home experiment had a tagline, this quoteâerroneously attributed to Abe Lincolnâwould be it: âGive me six hours to chop down a tree and I will spend the first four sharpening the ax.â So, what do you say we sharpen that (metaphorical) ax of yours and learn how to focus while working from home?

Here are some of the questions we answer in this article:
đ§ââď¸ How can mindfulness help you overcome them?
đĄ Before you begin⌠This article is part of our series on minimalism in a remote workplace. Check our other guides when youâre done here:
𤯠Here's Why You Canât Focus at Home
âIf you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles. If you know yourself but not the enemy, for every victory gained you will also suffer a defeat. If you know neither the enemy nor yourself, you will succumb in every battle.â
Sun Tzu, The Art of War
Poor Work Schedule
Are you an early bird or a night owl?
Do you know when youâre the most productive?
Do you have a daily ritual of recurring tasks to stay on track?Â
It turns out, the way you set your schedule may be affecting your ability to focus while working from home.
According to Daniel Pink, the author of a New York Times bestseller When: The Scientific Secrets of Perfect Timing, the best time to tackle concentration-intensive, analytical work is during whatâs called a âPeak.â
For early risers, the Peak usually occurs in the morning and is followed by an afternoon âTroughââbest for admin workâand evening âRecoveryâ when we excel in creative pursuits. If youâre a night owl, the order is reversed.(1)
âSo, what if I donât have a fixed schedule?â
If you notoriously ignore your natural inclinations and follow an erratic, unpredictable schedule, you fail to capitalize on your most productive moments. And that means you canât focus on the work that really matters, when it matters.

Home/Virtual Office Distractions
Thereâs a reason why some of the worldâs greatest minds prefer to work in seclusion. Writers like Thoreau, Hemingway, and Twain all penned some of their best works barricaded in remote retreats, far from civilization and pesky distractions.
Unfortunately, most of us telecommuters arenât so lucky.
Kids playing tag, family members asking for another âfavor,â or friends dropping by with a social callâthe modern âhome officeâ isnât the most focus-friendly environment.
And it only gets worse:
đ Hardware/software issues
đ Slow internet connection
đ§š Mounting household chores
đ Poor workplace ergonomics
Should we continue? And if that wasnât enough, your distributed team is bound to hack your attention even further:
â° Long, unproductive video meetings
đ˘ The expectation to stay connected 24/7
đŹ Misuse of sync vs. sync communication
đ Not observing time-zones differences
đĽ Unsolicited emails and calls
It doesnât matter how disciplined you are. Even if you filter out most of the home/office distractions, the trickle that gets through can effectively kill your focus.
Prolonged Home-Office Isolation
Sounds crazy, right? After all, is there better nourishment for deep focus than a blissful time alone, far from the office chatter and nosy co-workers?
The thing is, you can only defy the social animal in you for so long.Â
When you donât have the organic, micro-distractionsâwatercooler chit-chat, coffee breaks, talkative co-workersâyouâre bound to invite other, more intrusive companions:
đ Racing thoughts and anxietyÂ
đąď¸ Aimless web browsing
đ Doom scrolling (negative news)
đĽ Compulsive social media use
Should we add that none of these activities encourage a deep, intensive focus on the real work? As Cal Newport explains in his interview for Daily Stoic:
âThis hardness is especially manifest during those periods of downtime when youâre alone with your thoughts. People avoid these confrontations through constant, low-quality digital distraction much in the way that people of another era might have dealt with these difficulties with heavy drinking.â(2)
Of course, those false companions donât only chip away your concentration. They also affect the way you feel about yourself and your work. When you have too much time to think, you can easily fall into the limbo of doubt and self-criticism.

đ§ 3 Tips to Improve Focus While Working From Home
âI fear not the man who has practiced 10,000 kicks once, but I fear the man who has practiced one kick 10,000 times.â
Bruce Lee
1. Embrace Mindfulness
As cheesy as this may sound, meditation and mindfulness are one of the most effective ways to regain laser-sharp focus while working from home.
According to the American Psychological Association(3), mindfulness practices help:
â Suppress distractions
đââď¸ Fends off racing thoughts
đ§ Improve working memory
đ Boost emotional resilience
So, whatâs mindfulness anyway? đ¤
In simple terms, mindfulness is a state of absolute focus on a task, thought, action, object⌠you get the idea. Itâs total immersion in the singular, to the point where everything else is pushed to the margin of your perception.
Jon Kabat-Zinn, a renowned expert on meditation and founder of the Center for Mindfulness (CFM), defines mindfulness as âawareness that arises through paying attention, on purpose, in the present moment, non-judgementally.â(4)
Jon Kabat-Zinnâs talk on mindfulness at Google.
While mindfulness is a complex, multi-layered concept, you can become more aware of your work and improve your focus by following these simple steps:
â ď¸ Plan your day in advance. Dedicate each evening to plan your next day. Decide on the three most important tasks and write them down.Â
âł Block time. Anchor your obligations in space and time. Estimate the duration based on previous projects and put the tasks on your calendar.
đ Remove distractions. Clean up your home office and enable Do Not Disturb mode on your phone. Make sure nothing interferes with your work.
đ Get under the surface. Take a moment to deconstruct and deeply understand each task. Can you break it down into smaller steps? What makes it easy/difficult?
đ¤šââď¸ Donât multitask! Multitasking is a myth so stop trying. Instead, prioritize work and tackle the most difficult and challenging bits first.
âď¸ Get into journaling. Whenever you feel stuck or start walking in circles, take a step back and write down your thoughts. Use this template for some ideas.
2. Practice Mindfulness Meditation
In a 2016 book Tools of Titans, Tim Ferris, author and the creator of a record-smashing podcast The Tim Ferriss Show, asked some of the worldâs most successful people about their daily habits.
It turns out that 80% of the intervieweesâincluding the âGovernatorâ Arnold Schwarzenegger and writer Maria Popovaâmentioned meditation as one of the driving factors behind their success.(5)
While the benefits of meditation are not easily measurable, Mayo Clinic suggests it may positively affect physical and mental health as well as work performance:
đĄ Boosts creativity
đ Improves concentration
đ Increases self-awareness
đ¤ Alleviates sleep disorders
âĽď¸ Helps manage health conditions
You can think of meditation as a maintenance program for mindfulness. Itâll help you prime yourself for the day and gain fully clarity and focus while working from home.
Hereâs a simple recipe:
đź Start small. Set aside a couple of minutes each day. You can meditate in the morning, before work, or in the evening. Consistency matters more than timing.
đ Get comfortable. Sit on a chair, pillow, carpet, bed, or on the floor. Whatever works for you. Rest your hands on your knees and relax.Â
đť Tune in. Start tuning in to the rhythm of your breath. Notice how the air enters and exits your body with each inhalation and exhalation. Close your eyes.
đ¨ Continue breathing. Slowly tune out your surroundings. If your mind starts to wander, bring your attention back to your breath. Let thoughts come and go.Â
âĄď¸ Reboot to life. After a few minutes, move your focus from the breath to physical sensations and your surroundings. Gently open your eyes.
Of course, mindfulness meditation takes consistent practice. While you may not discover your lifeâs purpose after the first session, you will slow down for a moment and start noticing the things that usually escape your attention.
And thatâs a solid start.
If you want to make meditation a part of your daily routine, test-run apps like Waking Up, Headspace, or Calm that come with narrated guided meditation sessions.

3. Build up a Creative Flow
âThe idea is that flowing water never goes stale, so just keep on flowing.â
Bruce Lee
Have you ever been so absorbed by a task that you stopped noticing the passing of time? If so, you experienced whatâs known as the state of âflow.â
The concept of flow became a subject of intensive research in the 1970s, most notably by psychologists Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi and Jeanne Nakamura.
Mihaly Csikszentmihalyiâs TED talk on Flow (2004)
In a 1996 interview with Wired, Csikszentmihalyi described the state of flow as:
âBeing completely involved in an activity for its own sake. The ego falls away. Time flies. Every action, movement, and thought follows inevitably from the previous one, like playing jazz. Your whole being is involved, and you're using your skills to the utmost.â(6)
When you enter a state of flow, you:
đŹ Immerse in a singular activity
đ Detach from the troubles of life
đ Gain a clear sense of purpose and direction
đ Expect a positive outcome of the activity
đ Are motivated by the activity itself
âď¸ Stop noticing the passing of time
According to Nakamura and Csikszentmihalyi(7), achieving a state of flow is only possible when the following conditions are met:
đŻ A clear set of goals. Avoid ambiguity. Make sure to break complex tasks into incremental steps so you always know what to do next.Â
đď¸ââď¸ Difficulty/skills match. Work should be mildly challenging. Make it too easy and youâll get bored. If you set the bar too high, youâll quickly get discouraged.
đ Instant feedback. You need to âseeâ the progress youâre making. You can elicit instant feedback by using to-do lists or completing sets of instructions.

Mihaly Csikszentmihalyiâs model of Flow via Wikipedia
Bonus Tip: Use a Pomodoro Timer
Created by Francesco Cirillo in the 1980s, the Pomodoro Technique breaks work sessions into intensive, 25-minute sprints. Itâs a perfect solution if youâre notoriously distracted and canât focus long enough to build up the flow.
Hereâs how it works:
Set up a timer for 25 minutes
Work on a single task without stopping
When the timeâs up, take a 5-minute break
After completing 4 cycles, rest for 15-30 minutes
Tackling tasks in short, productive bursts will make work more challenging and fun. The self-imposed deadlines will also make you less likely to procrastinate. Once your focus improves, you can experiment a bit and make your Pomodoro sessions longer.
And thatâs it! đ

đ Conclusion
Figuring out how to focus while working from home takes time and dedication. Not only will you have to overcome external obstacles but also learn how to make peace with your greatest enemyâyour unproductive and easily distracted self.
Looking for an intuitive, minimalist productivity tool? Taskade is a real-time organization and collaboration platform that lets teams and individuals get work done the easy way.
Sign up and overcome distractions with Taskade AI! đ¤
đ¤ Custom AI Agents: Set up custom AI agents designed to automate routine tasks for a more focused work environment at home.
đŞ AI Generator: Generate personalized strategies for overcoming distractions, structure documents, and automatically create lists of tasks.
âď¸ AI Assistant: Write faster and smarter with AI suggestions. Generate content, improve your writing, and organize tasks in seconds.
đď¸ AI Prompt Templates Library: Access AI prompt templates designed to kick off all types of personal and business projects and tasks.
đŹ AI Chat: Ask AI for quick problem-solving tips, motivational quotes, or even a brief, intentional distraction to clear your mind.
đ Media Q&A: Use AI to analyze documents, spreadsheets, and other files for insights, patterns, and suggestions for improvement.
And much more...
đ§Ź Focus Tools Built with Genesis
Clone these AI-powered apps to sharpen your focus while working from home:
| App | What It Does | Clone |
|---|---|---|
| Study/Work Timer + Music | Pomodoro sessions with ambient sounds | Clone â |
| Breathe Circle | Guided breathing for focus breaks | Clone â |
| Mood Tracker | Track how focus affects your wellbeing | Clone â |
| Minimalistic ToDo | Distraction-free task management | Clone â |
đ Explore All Community Apps â
Build your own focus system with Taskade Genesis â describe what you need, and watch it come to life.
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- đ¤ Custom AI Agents â The intelligence layer
- đ§ Projects & Memory â The database layer
- âĄď¸ 100+ Integrations â The automation layer
Get started:
- Create Your First App â â Step-by-step tutorial
- Learn Workspace DNA â â Understand the architecture
