Narrow Focus
Most of our formal education encourages a narrow focus of attention. “Pay attention” is a phrase most of us have heard through grade school. Pay attention means to focus narrowly on what I am saying or on what you are doing. But constant narrow focus leads to gradual accumulation of physical and mental stress, distress, even burnout. I burned out long before I understood enough to use open focus in my job as a counselor, school psychologist, and teacher.
Open Focus
Open Focus is a mix of narrow and diffuse focus. If you are narrowly focused on a book you are reading, in open focus mode you take in the the space all around. If you are engrossed in an internal dialog, you open up and experience the world all around. You alternate attention between narrow and diffuse focus, sometimes paying attention simultaneously in both modes.
Remote/Objective versus Immersed Focus
In addition to narrow versus diffuse, Open Focus includes remote/objective versus immersed focus. With right-brain focus you are immersed in what you are experiencing. If you are tasting something and get totally into the tasting experience, this is immersed attention. An immersion style of attending is associated with mindful meditation where we attend to the body, emotions, sense modalities, and passing thoughts. Remote attention is when you create a distance between yourself and the object of attention.
Right Brain
Open-Focus attention that integrates narrow and diffuse attention is positive, creative, flexible, even loving. Open Focus is flexible attention that opens up your right brain to the world. A right-brain, diffuse, immersed and absorbed attentional style is unselfconscious and inclusive. It allows you to see things in context. It helps us adapt to a world that is constantly changing and evolving, a world that is never fully graspable, never fully known.
In 1982, Les Fehmi and George Fritz self-published 150-page spiral-bound 81/2 x 11 “The Open Focus Handbook.” I found the information too tightly packed to understand, no less put it into practice. Then in 2007 Les Fehmi and Jim Robbins published a full-length book,“The Open-Focus Brain: harnessing. the power of attention to heal the mind and body.” This book contains lots of exercises to optimize attention and experience a fuller life space.
Open-Focus Alpha synchronous is the quickest path to meditation possible. You need to focus on space and you can learn the basics with the short video below. But it is a completely different method of perception, so it takes learning and ongoing practice. When mastered, together with Ki Breathing Meditation, it is virtually an instant shift into balanced alpha brain waves. It is a shift from anxiety, stress, and fear. Open Focus is an Attention Therapy method that can lift you out of uncomfortable affective states into an alpha world state of mind.
Self-help books that help:
Total Self-Renewal through Attention Therapies and Open Focus (Sample Chapters)
The Open-Focus Brain: Harnessing the Power of Attention to Heal Mind and Body
Hi Joel, thanks for writting about Open Focus. I know many people who benefit from diffusing and immersing their attention. It helps to reduce stress, dissolve anxiety/fear/anger, it can be very helpful to people who strugge with chronic pain or insomnia. For some reason this very simple way of balancing the mind and the body and enhancing experience is not well recognised so far. I hope it will change soon.
Hi Dr. Kopec,
So good to hear you are working with Open Focus (OF). It is bubbling beneath the surface with the ongoing development of Brain Computer Interface (BCI) hardware and software and virtual reality (VR) hardware and software.
OpenVibe http://openvibe.inria.fr/discover/ is the open source software platform that allows anyone to design programs for hardware like Neurosky (http://neurosky.com) and Emotive (https://emotiv.com) — Not sure if compatable with Muse https://muse.totemapp.com/company
We are at the cusp of a brain revolution where people will be checking their EEG to make sure they are in alpha before meetings, etc., just like women do today with makeup.
I’ll stay in touch with you; I’ll follow you on Twitter.
Joel
Hi,Joel can u tell me how to create immerse focus so that I can can create immersive experience?
Sorry to take so long to respond. I would recommend a book by Thich Nhat Hanh: Peace Is Every Step: The Path of Mindfulness in Everyday Life
I would also recommend some of the free mp3 downloads from Insight Meditation Ctr: http://www.insightmeditationcenter.org