In the AI era, your fragmented attention might actually be fine
Seventy percent of Gen Z say they're worried AI will hurt job prospects. In the same Gallup poll, a quarter said they wish smartphones had never been invented. This is the first generation that grew up with them.
This summer in New York, a group organized something called Summer of Ludd: no phones allowed, no social media promotion, attendees chanting "No Gemini, no GPT, no Claude." The neo-Luddite movement isn't against technology as such. It's against algorithms, data tracking, and how tech has quietly eaten into social life and sleep.
What's funny is that this anti-social-media event spread mainly through TikTok.
Around the same time, a Harvard undergraduate asked a question: does reading still matter in the AI era? She couldn't focus long enough to finish a book. Her classmates were forming reading groups; she felt left behind. The answer she got surprised her: if you can't read one book, read ten at once.
Pick one up, read five pages, lose focus, put it down, pick up another. Ten books running simultaneously, no commitment to any of them. Without the weight of "I have to finish this one," you start finding unexpected threads connecting them.
The advice rests on an observation: you're trying to fit yourself into a format most people find hard, reading straight through from cover to cover in one sitting. Academia figured this out centuries ago. The reason papers have abstracts, topic sentences, and section headers is that even full-time scholars have short attention spans. AI has exploded the amount of information available. Your brain is still the version that needs to come up for air.
The Summer of Ludd logic and the reading advice are saying the same thing. They organized on TikTok, then put their phones away when they arrived. When the event ended, the phones came back out. What they were practicing was the act of choosing, directing attention toward what they decided.
Next time you want to put a book down halfway through, put it down and pick up another one. You've always read this way.