Even with clarity, life keeps presenting competing urgencies. This chapter offers a narrowing question: what is important right now? Not eventually, not in theory—now.
Focus is presented as a discipline of presence. When you juggle multiple priorities simultaneously, you dilute execution and create anxiety. When you choose one priority for the moment, you recover power and reduce the mental noise of unfinished intentions.
The book encourages visible focus: define the single most important task for the day, protect time for it, and let other tasks wait without guilt. This is not avoidance; it is sequencing.
The essentialist treats attention like a spotlight, not a floodlight. You illuminate one thing fully, then move on. Progress comes from depth applied sequentially, not from shallow attention sprayed across everything at once.