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you can also make a lot of money buy selling things for more than you bought them for, and lose weight by simply eating less. You can feel better by sleeping more, and going to the gym every day. You can get ahead in your career by becoming great friends with your boss and your boss' boss.

It turns out that often it being easy to describe in broad strokes how to do something doesn't make it easy to do in practise.



Paying attention in class might be a legitimate issue requiring medication for some people, but otherwise it, and doing optional assignments, are a choice.


> Paying attention in class might be a legitimate issue requiring medication for some people

Considering I would be classified as a member of this group, let me ask:

> but otherwise it, and doing optional assignments, are a choice

If attention is a choice, then how reliably can you control your attention based your choice?

For the sake of analogy, is being able to control one's attention like controlling one's breathe? As in, one can consciously be aware of and control their breathing to some degree, but without a conscious choice, breathing will still operate in the background. Or is attention something like a voluntary muscle movement which requires explicit intention?

I am asking because I have/had little to no control over my ability to focus. Thus, I am curious what it is like for others.


do you truly in your heart of hearts believe that people simply have the choice to pay attention or not, and simply not? as easy as flipping a switch?

and that despite that they choose not to?




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