SALTT Solns.

Category: Lived Experience

  • A bit of a blur

    That I needed to focus on figuring out how I managed my focus was a pivotal wake-up call (that’s the kind of strapline I’m likely to repeat in these blogs). According to the amount of thinking I’ve put into SALTT, I would have thought I would have an unambiguous sense of direction by now: foolish me!

    I found myself amused by the emerging technology of AI. As a tech-geek, I’ve been obsessing about machine intelligence most of my life. All these shiny new toys were too alluring to ignore. The development of the SALTT programme had reached a hiatus, and I found myself just messing around in the AI playground. OK, SALTT has helped me focus, but I realised I was easily distracted by activity that was not creating the value I wanted.

    This raises a key point about focus management though. It is not about the tools; they just facilitate age old strategies that still are relevant. Focus management, really, is about developing self-awareness: recognising when you are focussed, and when you are not, and moreover, when you want to be focussed. This isn’t about having continuous laser vision on productivity; being blinkered to possibility and opportunity has its downsides. No, it is about being able to direct your attention to where it is useful; to where you want to place it, rather than the barrage of stimuli that clammer for our mind’s bandwidth. Letting your mind wander can work wonders, as can mindfulness; if that is what you are after; then it becomes a matter of choice.

    To a large extent, a lack of focus, a blur of life, might be seen as the trap of a lack of self-awareness, a lack of understanding of your own values, passion, and direction; and it is easy to lose sight of those. I say a trap because it is a blind spot, but not merely an area that you cannot see, but one you are unaware of that you cannot see because you cannot perceive it. I did not know I needed glasses until I took an eye test.

    Transcending the blissful ignorance of unconscious incompetence is a tough one; it is a paradox and it is locked in. Usually, it takes some disruption, some outside influence or information, to discover where our blind spots are: they often need pointing out to us, frequently in abrupt ways. A kind of meta-focus, I guess – the kind that proved pivotal in my recovery.

    In my case here, although I had lost focus, having had some clarity and understanding of focus management, helped me to spot that my attention had wandered away from where I wanted it to be; and gave me impetus to do something about it. The rest was more like remembering my glasses were on the top of my head.

  • TOTAL RECALL!

    TOTAL RECALL!

    I did consider using the trope of Total Recall in a pitch deck (a presentation to raise finance for this SALTT project) but owing to time limits, it didn’t make the cut. Total Recall is an old school Arnie film Based on the 1966 short story “We Can Remember It for You Wholesale” by Philip K. Dick. Arnie plays a builder who goes to the Rekall agency for some entertainment and low and behold, he turns out to be some Martian secret agent who has had his memories blanked – or is he? The film would screw with your mind if it wasn’t such a cheesy 80s SciFi flick.

    I used the metaphor for when I started to realise what SALTT was actually about. SALTT came as an attempt to shift my life from empty, soul draining tedium to finding things that gave me a personal sense of accomplishment – to get my life in order a bit. It was when I considered that there might be others like me that might benefit from what I was doing That I had a bit of a wake up call.

    My life-long aspiration was to be a tech founder. Since my friend’s mother, a maths teacher at the first school in my hometown to get a computer, brought a Commodore PET home at weekends for us to mess with – I wanted to to tech.

    I kept trying but circumstances buried that aspiration in a dark pit of dispear. To be honest, just wanted to pass out and never regain consciousness – hardly self-actualizing. Yet, as I started to revive, it clicked. Maybe I could help myself and help others also through the medium of digital technology. I remembered who I was; I was a computer geek and an entrepreneur – it was then that I went into Total Recall. A roller-coaster ride for sure, but just over a year later, from utter apathy, I’m restless, wanting to bring SALTT to market – something has clearly changed in me – what?

    More to the point, what am I trying to say in this blog post that might provide some hope to those who have found themselves in somewhat of a mess. I guess I’m trying to say, even if it sounds Disney sickening, ‘remember who you truly are’. No, let us dive further

    I hit upon writing this post because I have just been thunderstruck again by the principle of Total Recall.