Your phone is a tool. It is also a doorway for other people's priorities to walk into your day. If you have ever picked up your device for one task and resurfaced later feeling scattered, you are not alone - and you are not broken. Your Attention Is Being Stolen is a practical guide to living well with technology while reducing digital distraction and rebuilding the kind of attention that makes work satisfying and relationships present. Jonas Merakai shows how modern environments trigger habit loops, amplify task switching costs, and drain mental energy through constant low-level vigilance. Instead of asking you to delete every app or disappear, the book focuses on realistic attention management: choosing what deserves your focus, designing your devices and spaces to support it, and setting digital boundaries that keep you reachable without being always on. You will learn hands-on methods for notification control, simple focus routines you can repeat on busy days, and small shifts in environment design that make the right action easier than the default scroll. This book is for professionals, students, parents, and creatives who want to think more clearly, finish what matters, and feel less stressed by constant input. By the end, you will have a personal framework for attention recovery, a way to spot your triggers early, and a sustainable plan you can adjust as life changes - so technology serves your life, rather than quietly steering it.
Your Attention Is Being Stolen
SKU: 9789377783792
$25.99 Regular Price
$20.45Sale Price
- Jonas Merakai writes about attention, behaviour, and the small design choices that shape everyday life. His work is driven by a simple observation: most people are not failing at focus; they are trying to do meaningful things inside environments that were never designed for sustained thought. He is interested in practical changes that respect modern realities - jobs that require responsiveness, families that need presence, and devices that are genuinely useful - while still making room for quiet, depth, and follow-through. Over the years, Jonas has experimented with the same pressures his readers face: crowded inboxes, busy chat threads, work that blends into evenings, and the constant invitation to check "just for a second". He approaches attention as a craft, built through routines, defaults, and honest self-knowledge rather than guilt. His aim is to translate familiar ideas from psychology and design into steps that work on an ordinary Tuesday, not only on retreat. A recurring influence in Jonas's thinking is the older tradition of protected time: the Sabbath as a cultural pause, the library as a public refuge for concentration, and the pre-digital habit of finishing a thought without interruption. He brings that thread forward into the present, showing how to rebuild spaces for sustained attention inside a connected life.


















