There’s a moment in filmmaking called a focus pull—when the camera shifts attention from one subject to another. Nothing new enters the frame. Nothing leaves. What changes is what matters.
Lately, I’ve been thinking about focus the same way.
In a short video I revisited recently, I’m out of focus. Soft. Blurred. Meanwhile, the things around me—objects in my office, familiar visual cues—are sharp. Clear. Present.
At first glance, that might feel backward. Aren’t we supposed to remove distractions? Strip the environment down? Clear the desk, clear the mind?
Not always.
Sometimes focus isn’t about eliminating what’s around us. It’s about placing the right things nearby.
Focus Isn’t Just Internal
We tend to treat focus as something purely mental—a battle of willpower, discipline, or attention. But focus is relational. It’s shaped by what we see, what we touch, what quietly reminds us of who we are and what we’re doing.
Your environment is never neutral. It’s either supporting your attention—or quietly fragmenting it.
The objects in my workspace aren’t decorations. They’re anchors. Signals. They don’t demand attention; they receive it. They help pull focus back when it drifts.
And that’s the key difference.
Avatars, Not Distractions
A distraction pulls you away from your intention. A focus helper pulls you back to it.
A book spine you haven’t read yet—but intend to. A photograph that reminds you why this work matters. A tool that signals, “This is where deep work happens.”
These aren’t clutter. They’re avatars—stand-ins for values, goals, and identity.
When chosen intentionally, they reduce cognitive effort instead of adding to it. You don’t have to remember what matters. You can see it.
Why This Matters as the Week Progresses
By the end of the week, focus tends to fray. Energy dips. Attention scatters. That’s usually when we try to force clarity—tighten control, clean everything up, power through.
But Fridays are better suited for orientation than optimization.
Instead of asking, “What should I remove?” Try asking, “What helps me remember?”
The answer might already be on your desk.
Focus doesn’t always require being sharp at the center of the frame. Sometimes it’s enough to let the right things around you do the pulling.
