How to Restore Mental Sharpness at Work

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Summary

Restoring mental sharpness at work involves retraining the brain to focus, manage stress, and engage in deep work by adopting intentional habits that prioritize clarity, mindfulness, and sustainable productivity.

  • Engage in deep work: Start your day by committing to one meaningful task without distractions, gradually building your brain’s capacity for focus over time.
  • Take mindful breaks: Incorporate short, consistent pauses throughout the day, such as deep breathing or body scans, to reset your mind and improve decision-making.
  • Practice mindfulness daily: Dedicate time each day to mindfulness exercises like focused breathing or active listening to enhance emotional balance and cognitive resilience at work.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Ian Koniak
    Ian Koniak Ian Koniak is an Influencer

    I help tech sales AEs perform to their full potential in sales and life by mastering their mindset, habits, and selling skills | Sales Coach | Former #1 Enterprise AE at Salesforce | $100M+ in career sales

    95,862 followers

    I used to think my struggle with focus was a productivity issue. Turns out, it was a neurological one. I’m not joking when I say this: The same part of your brain that helps you regulate emotions, craft powerful sales stories, and write C-suite proposals… ...is also the part that atrophies when you binge on dopamine: email, social, Slack, “quick wins.” Most reps aren’t lazy. Their brain is just out of shape. Here’s how to fix that: A few years ago, I hired a personal trainer. He put me through absolute hell: bear crawls, single-leg squats, ring pushups. Halfway through, I looked at him and said: “Why does this feel impossible?” His answer? “Because your muscles aren’t developed… yet. You’re not used to this kind of resistance.” And it hit me right then—this is exactly what happens in sales. When reps avoid writing POVs, building business cases, or planning strategic outreach…it’s not just procrastination. It’s brain fatigue. 🧠 The science: Your prefrontal cortex controls future planning, storytelling, emotional regulation—everything required for deep sales work. But most reps are addicted to short-term dopamine: → inbox clearing → CRM busy work → social scrolling → chasing tiny, meaningless tasks These spike the nucleus accumbens—the brain’s pleasure center. Do it enough, and you’ve trained your brain to crave easy wins and avoid deep work. And when the deep work finally arrives? Just like that first day at the gym... …it hurts. But there’s good news: You can re-train your brain. Just like you build physical muscle, you can build mental muscle. It starts with prefrontal reps. Here’s the 21-day protocol I now give to every rep I coach: Step 1: Buy a stack of index cards Step 2: Every morning, write down ONE deep work task: → Craft a POV → Build a deck → Write a cold email to an exec → Record a 1:1 video Step 3: Do it FIRST. No dopamine until the card is done. Step 4: Repeat for 21 days. Add a second task in week 2. A third in week 3. Do this and watch your brain change. Watch how you suddenly want to update your deck. Want to send strategic emails. Want to go deeper into your accounts. It’s not magic. It’s neuroplasticity.

  • View profile for Jon Macaskill
    Jon Macaskill Jon Macaskill is an Influencer

    Dad First 🔹 Men Talking Mindfulness Podcast Cohost 🔹 Keynote Speaker 🔹 Entrepreneur 🔹 Retired Navy SEAL Commander

    143,135 followers

    The most overlooked productivity tool? 3-minute mental fitness breaks. Most leaders think they can't afford to stop. The truth? You can't afford NOT to. Research has found that even brief mindfulness practices significantly improve decision quality. One study showed that just a 3-minute mindfulness intervention enhanced critical decision-making abilities under pressure. I see this with my executive clients daily: • The fintech CEO who takes 3 minutes before board meetings to reset her mental state. She consistently makes clearer strategic decisions that her team can actually execute. • The hospital administrator who pauses between back-to-back crises. This simple practice helps him maintain emotional balance while handling life-or-death situations. • The startup founder who schedules five 3-minute breaks throughout his day. He reports fewer reactive decisions and better strategic thinking. Mental fitness breaks aren't meditation in disguise. They're strategic reset points that: 1. Break decision fatigue cycles 2. Reduce cognitive biases (we all have them) 3. Create space between reaction and response 4. Restore perspective when you're in the weeds How to implement this tomorrow: → Set specific break triggers (after meetings, before decisions, between tasks) → Keep it simple: 3 deep breaths, a brief body scan, or simply observing your thoughts → Stay consistent even when "too busy" (ESPECIALLY when too busy) → Notice the quality of decisions before vs. after these breaks Leaders often pride themselves on cognitive endurance, pushing through mental fatigue like it's a badge of honor. But the strongest leaders I know aren't afraid to pause, reset, and then decide. Mental clarity isn't a luxury. It's the foundation of every other leadership skill you possess. Try it tomorrow. Three minutes. Five times. Watch what happens to your decision quality. And feel free to repost if someone in your life needs to hear this. 📩 Subscribe to my newsletter here → https://lnkd.in/dD6bDpS7 You'll get FREE access to my 21-Day Mindfulness & Meditation Course packed with real, actionable strategies to lead with clarity, resilience, and purpose.

  • View profile for Dennis Yao Yu
    Dennis Yao Yu Dennis Yao Yu is an Influencer

    Founder & CEO of The Other Group I Scaling GTM for Commerce Technologies | AI Commerce | Startup Advisor I Linkedin Top Voice I Ex-Shopify, Society6, Art.com (acquired by Walmart)

    24,329 followers

    March 15th of 2016, I was woken up at 4 am by an intense pain in my stomach. Attempting to start my day, I found myself staggering downstairs, only to be overwhelmed by nausea. It was a wake-up call, signaling that something was seriously wrong. This episode led me to a diagnosis that many hard driving professionals are familiar with: chronic stress and burnout, the silent toll of juggling multiple roles. At the time, I was navigating between 3.5 roles 1) being the Director of Business Development at a technology company 2) being an Executive MBA student at USC Marshall 3) being a new father 3.5) enduring a grueling three-hour daily commute from Pasadena to Santa Monica daily This pivotal moment marked the beginning of my deep dive into mindfulness. Until then I have studied various philosophy but never practiced. It’s a journey that transformed not just my personal well-being but also my professional performance. Through studying of classics like “Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind,” immersing myself in multiple meditation retreats, absorbing countless content, and meeting with PhDs, I crafted a suite of mindfulness practices that became my cornerstone for not only managing stress but the source of high performance achievement - hit 120% of my sales goal that year 🛠️It’s became a secret weapon. A very useful tool. Here are some practical steps I've integrated into my life, which I believe can profoundly impact anyone's professional journey: 🧠Mindfulness Practices for High Performance Establish a Daily Practice: Each morning, I dedicate time for box breathing exercise (adopted by Navy Seals) This simple act of returning my focus to my breath whenever my mind wanders has sharpened my focus, improved my emotional regulation, and cultivated a powerful presence in all aspects of my life. Mindful Moments: Wove mindfulness into the fabric of my daily activities. I have blocked off time on my calendar in between back to back meetings. These brief moments for mindful activities between tasks have become a forcing function to reset and recenter. They enhance my engagement and efficiency with each task at hand. Mindful Listening: In every meeting and conversation, I practice fully focusing on the speaker, absorbing not just their words but also their non-verbal cues, without crafting my response in my head. This approach has not only deepened relationships but also ensured that I fully comprehend the nuances of each interaction. My journey underscores that peak performance transcends technical prowess; it's equally about nurturing mental resilience, embracing mindfulness, and fostering a profound connection with our personal value. In the high-stakes realms of management and revenue functions, where success is often quantified by outcomes, goals, and quotas, mindful approach offers a sustainable and fulfilling path to what we do. Helpful material in comment 👇🏼 #selfdevelopment #mentalhealth #mentalperformance #leadership

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