I think I would need to first try my hand at a complex project to be able to answer your question; my ordinary life hasn’t demanded anything of the kind from me lately. And anyhow, even so I couldn’t make sure that the real bottleneck is my power of focus; generally poor organizational capability seems a likelier culprit for potential failure. Right now, only trying to assemble a syllabus for my math studies is giving me headaches; there are too many things to study and I should have been done with them three years ago anyway.
Presumably I select activities according to personal interest and relevance to me, rather than according to task complexity or my long-term best interest. The data I’ve been compulsively analyzing and computing helps me answer questions I’m very interested in, although it may not be the kind of information I should be focusing upon.
Good luck, but remember that the kind of problems that are treatable with MAO-B inhibitors involve only your baseline capacity for desiring/pursuing anything at all. That may or may not be the reason you’re not getting as much done as you would want to. If you’re generally, how should I say, not much of a wanter, then curcumin will help you, but otherwise (if your lack of motivation is not unselective) I wouldn’t bet on it.
I think I would need to first try my hand at a complex project to be able to answer your question; my ordinary life hasn’t demanded anything of the kind from me lately. And anyhow, even so I couldn’t make sure that the real bottleneck is my power of focus; generally poor organizational capability seems a likelier culprit for potential failure. Right now, only trying to assemble a syllabus for my math studies is giving me headaches; there are too many things to study and I should have been done with them three years ago anyway.
Presumably I select activities according to personal interest and relevance to me, rather than according to task complexity or my long-term best interest. The data I’ve been compulsively analyzing and computing helps me answer questions I’m very interested in, although it may not be the kind of information I should be focusing upon.
Good luck, but remember that the kind of problems that are treatable with MAO-B inhibitors involve only your baseline capacity for desiring/pursuing anything at all. That may or may not be the reason you’re not getting as much done as you would want to. If you’re generally, how should I say, not much of a wanter, then curcumin will help you, but otherwise (if your lack of motivation is not unselective) I wouldn’t bet on it.