In today’s world, your attention is under siege. Endless notifications, constant multitasking, and a flood of information leave your mind scattered, your memory dulled, and your energy drained. What if you could reclaim control—not through hacks or quick fixes, but through a structured system that strengthens your mental stamina the way athletes train their bodies? This book delivers that system. Grounded in cognitive science and designed for real lives, it offers an 8-week attention plan built around three pillars: clean inputs, deliberate training, and focused execution. You’ll discover how to apply cognitive workouts that sharpen working memory and flexibility, build mental hygiene habits that clear away the clutter, and follow a progressive framework that makes deep concentration sustainable rather than sporadic. Instead of relying on willpower, you’ll learn how to: - Protect your focus with a daily rhythm that prevents overtraining - Apply executive function training to improve decision-making under pressure - Use practical working memory exercises and attention intervals to build measurable endurance - Design environments and routines that reduce digital distractions and keep you aligned with your priorities Whether you’re a professional overwhelmed by competing demands, a student preparing for high-stakes exams, or simply someone who feels their focus slipping in a noisy world, this book offers a proven route to clarity and control. By the end, you’ll hold a repeatable system for time and attention management—one that lets you think deeply, work with precision, and recover your most valuable resource: a mind you can trust.
Clean • Train • Focus
SKU: 9789371772471
$28.99 Regular Price
$21.61Sale Price
- Avery Lang writes at the intersection of cognitive science, contemplative practice, and design—focused on how everyday structures shape what we pay attention to. After years of building simple protocols for teams under pressure—from classrooms to clinics to creative studios—Avery turned those field-tested methods into practical frameworks any reader can apply. Lang’s work favors clear language over hype, evidence over fads, and small experiments that compound into durable habits. When not drafting models for “clean inputs, smart training, and deliberate focus,” Avery curates a weekly note on attention ethics, tests micro‑routines that fit real lives, and helps readers measure what actually improves their day. This book distills that approach into an 8‑week system built for busy people who want results they can observe, track, and keep.


















