We live in an era of constant, unrelenting distraction that keeps the nervous system in low-grade fight-or-flight, blocks learning and creativity, and quietly erodes health and performance. This episode shows people how to shift from distraction → deliberate focus using physiology, environment, and language.
In today’s presentation Dr. Wells explores how to protect your attention in a world that’s engineered to steal it. He tells the story of climbing Chimborazo in Ecuador—with no cell service—and how immersion in nature, altitude, and risk forced him to focus on the only thing that mattered: getting safely off the mountain. Greg connects that moment to the science of distraction, the “compulsion loop” of our devices, and the sympathetic overactivation that kills problem-solving and creativity. Then he lays out practical focus practices—nature exposure, tech boundaries, single-tasking—that leaders, athletes, and parents can use today.
You will learn how constant notifications keep the brain in a sympathetic state and why that suppresses learning, memory, and innovation; how even looking at images of nature drops blood pressure and how weekly “green time” boosts immunity through phytoncides; the difference between threat focus (“everything’s urgent”) and task focus (“the single next step”); why removing tech friction (phone basket, no-phone hikes, scheduled deep work) restores attention; and how challenge + focus + recovery triggers physiological supercompensation—more red blood cells, more capacity, more performance.
You will discover that focus is not a personality trait—it’s a physiological state you can build by changing your inputs (breath, nature, tech). Control the inputs and your brain will give you the deep work.
Most high performers are trying to do world-class work with a brain that’s half-distracted and half-stressed. Greg’s approach shows you how to clear your mind so your best ideas, best writing, best decisions, and best relationships can actually happen.