Context Switching, Overwhelm, and the ‘I Can’t Start’ Problem

You know that feeling?

Seven browser tabs open. Three Slack messages. Two meetings. One critical task.

And you’re just… frozen. Staring at the screen. Can’t start anything.

Yeah. Me too.

Overwhelmed person with papers flying

πŸ”„ The Context Switching Thing

Here’s my typical day:

  • πŸ’¬ Technical discussion about architecture
  • πŸ“„ Review a proposal (wait, what was I just thinking about?)
  • πŸ‘₯ Quick meeting
  • πŸ’» Back to coding (what was my last thought?)
  • ❓ Urgent question
  • πŸ”” Slack ping
  • πŸ”” Another ping
  • ⚠️ That important thing? Still not done.
Every switch costs you.

Not just time. Mental energy. Focus. Everything.

It’s like your brain is a computer that keeps crashing and restarting.

Eventually, you run out of memory.

Computer crashing

😡 When Everything Feels Like Too Much

When everything is urgent, nothing gets done properly.

The spiral:
Too much to do
↓
Can’t pick what’s first
↓
Try to do everything
↓
Do nothing well
↓
Feel behind
↓
More stress
↓
Can’t focus even more

Sound familiar?

😀 The worst part? The important stuff gets pushed to “later.”
Later never comes.
Stressed person

🚫 The ‘I Can’t Start’ Problem

This is the worst one.

You finally have time. You sit down. You’re ready.

And then… nothing.

Instead you:

  • πŸ“§ Check email
  • πŸ—‚οΈ Reorganize your desktop
  • πŸ“ Update that random document
  • 🀷 Literally anything else
Procrastinating
I used to think this was just procrastination.

It’s not.

It’s your brain saying “I’m too tired for this right now.”

When you’ve been switching contexts all day, you have no energy left.

Starting something big? That takes energy you don’t have.

So your brain just… doesn’t.

Brain tired

✨ What Actually Helps Me

I haven’t figured this out completely. But here’s what works:

1. Time blocking (seriously)

Protect your focus time like it’s a real meeting.

Because it is.

Calendar blocking

2. Brain dump (2 minutes)

Feeling overwhelmed?

Write down everything in your head. Right now. Two minutes.

  • βœ“ It doesn’t have to be organized
  • βœ“ Just get it OUT of your brain
  • βœ“ This creates space. Just enough space to breathe.

3. Start ridiculously small

Can’t start the big thing?

Don’t.

Just:

  • βœ“ Open the file
  • βœ“ Write one sentence
  • βœ“ Read what you wrote last time
  • βœ“ Literally anything that’s step 1

Momentum is easier than starting.

Small steps

4. Batch the interruptions

Instead of checking Slack constantly:

  • βœ“ Set times to check (like twice an hour)
  • βœ“ Same with email
  • βœ“ Turn off notifications when you need to focus

Not always possible. But when it is? Game changer.

5. Know when you’re useless

After back-to-back meetings? I’m toast for deep work.

So I don’t try.

I do emails. Admin stuff. Quick tasks.

Save the important work for when my brain actually works.

Success celebration

πŸ’‘ The Thing Nobody Tells You

Your inability to start isn’t a character flaw.

Read that again.

It’s not laziness.

It’s not lack of discipline.

It’s your brain telling you something.

Maybe you need:

  • 🧘 Space to think
  • 🎯 A clearer first step
  • βœ… Permission to do less
  • πŸ’€ Actual rest
Your brain has limits.

Those limits are real.

They deserve respect.
Self care

πŸ€” One Last Thing

Next time you’re frozen and can’t start:

Ask yourself: “What does my brain actually need right now?”

Not what you “should” need.

What you actually need.

✨ The work will be there.

You’ll do it better when you’re actually ready.
You got this

What about you?

What helps when you’re overwhelmed?

(Genuinely want to know)