Agent Skills: How to Become So Focused It Feels Illegal

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skills/dan-koe/skills/deep-focus/SKILL.md

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deep-focus
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How to Become So Focused It Feels Illegal

From Dan Koe's article "How to become so focused it feels illegal"

The Focus Equation

Focus = Clarity + Importance + Urgency

All three must be present:

Clarity

Know exactly what you're working on.

  • Vague goals = scattered attention
  • Specific tasks = concentrated energy

Bad: "Work on my business" Good: "Write 500 words for newsletter introduction"

Importance

The task must matter to your goals.

  • If it doesn't connect to your vision, your brain won't prioritize it
  • Importance creates willingness to push through difficulty

Ask: "Does completing this move me toward my ideal future?"

Urgency

Real deadline or consequence.

  • Without urgency, importance fades
  • Artificial deadlines rarely work
  • Best urgency: real stakes (publish date, client deadline, accountability)

The Intrinsic Motivator Stack

Sustainable focus comes from internal drivers, stacked in order:

Curiosity → (leads to) Passion → (leads to) Purpose → (leads to) Autonomy → (leads to) Mastery

Curiosity

The starting point. You have to be interested.

  • Follow what genuinely intrigues you
  • Don't force interest in things you "should" care about

Passion

Sustained curiosity. When curiosity compounds into genuine enthusiasm.

  • Comes from repeated engagement
  • Can't be manufactured, must be discovered

Purpose

Curiosity + passion directed toward meaningful outcome.

  • Connects your work to something larger
  • Answers "why does this matter?"

Autonomy

Control over how, when, and what you work on.

  • Focus dies when you feel controlled
  • Create conditions where you choose the work

Mastery

The drive to get better.

  • Progress is inherently motivating
  • Visible improvement feeds more focus

The stack builds: You can't have mastery without autonomy. Can't have autonomy without purpose. And so on.

The Fill / Empty / Use Cycle

Your brain has three modes:

Fill Brain (Learning)

  • Consuming information
  • Reading, watching, listening
  • Taking in new ideas

Empty Brain (Rest)

  • Not actively thinking
  • Walking, showering, sleeping
  • Letting ideas percolate

Use Brain (Creation)

  • Producing output
  • Writing, building, creating
  • Applying what you've learned

The mistake: Filling constantly without emptying or using.

Information without creation = mental clutter.

The cycle:

  1. Fill: Learn something specific
  2. Empty: Walk, rest, let it settle
  3. Use: Create something with it
  4. Repeat

Productivity vs Creativity Blocks

Productivity block: You know what to do, can't start.

  • Usually: Fear of imperfection or overwhelm
  • Solution: Make the first step tiny. "Just open the document."

Creativity block: You don't know what to do.

  • Usually: Not enough input or ideas
  • Solution: Fill brain more. Read, expose yourself to new ideas.

The Focus Environment

Focus is easier when:

Physical:

  • Phone in another room
  • Clean workspace
  • Right temperature
  • Proper lighting

Digital:

  • Notifications off
  • Distracting apps blocked
  • Single task visible (close other tabs)

Mental:

  • Clear on the ONE thing you're doing
  • Time block protected
  • Consequences for not completing clear

The Focus Stack (Dan's System)

Morning (highest energy):

  • Most creative or demanding work
  • No inputs until deep work done
  • 2-4 hour focus block

Afternoon (medium energy):

  • Administrative tasks
  • Communications
  • Learning and research

Evening (lowest energy):

  • Light tasks or rest
  • Planning tomorrow
  • Wind down

Getting Into Flow

Flow state requirements:

  1. Clear goals: Know exactly what success looks like
  2. Immediate feedback: Can you tell if you're doing well?
  3. Challenge-skill balance: Hard enough to engage, not so hard you give up

Flow killers:

  • Interruptions (even checking phone briefly)
  • Unclear next step
  • Task too easy (bored) or too hard (anxious)
  • Physical discomfort (hunger, fatigue)

Diagnosing Focus Problems

"I can't get started" → Clarity problem. Get more specific about EXACTLY what to do first.

"I lose focus after 10 minutes" → Importance problem. Reconnect to why this matters, or do different work.

"I work but nothing gets done" → Urgency problem. Create real stakes or deadlines.

"I feel foggy and can't think" → Physical problem. Sleep, exercise, food, or need to empty brain.

"I'm not motivated" → Intrinsic stack problem. Working on wrong thing. Follow curiosity.

The Daily Focus Protocol

  1. Morning: No phone first hour. Fill brain briefly (read), then use brain (create).

  2. Before work: Write down THE ONE THING that matters today.

  3. Deep work block: 2-4 hours, no interruptions, phone away.

  4. Post-deep work: Take a walk (empty brain). Ideas will come.

  5. Afternoon: Administrative, communications, learning.

  6. End of day: Review what got done. Plan tomorrow's ONE THING.

Key Quotes

"Focus = Clarity + Importance + Urgency"

"Information without creation is mental clutter."

"You can't force interest in things you 'should' care about."

"Progress is inherently motivating."

Common Objections

"I have to multitask for my job" → Batch similar tasks. Protect even 1-2 hours of focus time.

"I don't have time for long focus blocks" → Start with 25 minutes. Anything is better than constant switching.

"I don't know what to focus on" → That's a clarity problem, not a focus problem. Solve that first.

"I've tried everything" → Have you solved the physical basics? Sleep, exercise, nutrition affect focus more than any technique.