Ceramic artist Hector Konomi is launching a simple public challenge designed to help individuals build better habits around focus, attention, and intentional work. The “Seven Days of Attention” Challenge asks participants to slow down, notice how they work with their hands and time, and practice small daily acts of care—no special tools required.
“Rushing is usually the source of the problem,” Konomi says. “Whether it’s clay, work, or daily life, things improve when you give them the time they ask for.”
The challenge draws from principles Konomi has followed throughout his career, shaped by his training in Japanese Tokoname ceramics and his studio practice in Toronto. It is not about productivity hacks or output. It is about building awareness through repetition and restraint.
Why This Habit Matters
Modern research supports the value of slowing down and working with intention:
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Studies show that task-switching can reduce productivity by up to 40%.
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People who focus on one task at a time report lower stress levels by nearly 30%.
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Hand-based activities improve concentration and memory retention by up to 25%.
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Repeating a small habit daily increases the likelihood of long-term adoption by over 70%.
“You don’t fix overwhelm by adding more tools,” Konomi says. “You fix it by removing noise.”
The Seven Days of Attention: Daily Plan
Each day requires 10–15 minutes and no equipment beyond what participants already use.
Day 1 – Notice Choose one everyday task. Do it without distraction. Observe where you rush.
Day 2 – Repeat Do the same task again. Try to keep your pace steady.
Day 3 – Simplify Remove one unnecessary step from that task.
Day 4 – Care Clean, organize, or maintain the object you use for the task.
Day 5 – Slow Down Deliberately work at half speed. Notice what changes.
Day 6 – Reflect Write down one thing that improved when you slowed down.
Day 7 – Continue Decide which part of this practice you want to keep.
“Mastery doesn’t come from novelty,” Konomi says. “It comes from doing the same thing with attention.”
Share Your Progress (Optional)
Participants are encouraged—but not required—to share their experience.
Suggested public post prompts:
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“One thing I noticed when I slowed down today was…”
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“A task I rush without realizing is…”
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“Repeating this changed how I felt about…”
For those who prefer privacy, Konomi recommends a simple alternative: “Keep a private note. Write one honest sentence each day. That’s enough.”
The Seven Days of Attention Challenge is open to everyone. There is no cost, no sign-up, and no finish line.
“Attention is something you can practice,” Konomi says. “You just have to start.”
About Hector Konomi
Hector Konomi is a Toronto-based ceramic artist trained in the Tokoname teaware lineage of Japan. His work focuses on hand-formed teapots and functional vessels shaped by disciplined repetition, quiet utility, and respect for material. Alongside his studio practice, he writes and speaks about process, tradition, and the value of sustained attention in work and life.
Media Contact
Contact Person: Hector Konomi
Email: Send Email
City: Toronto
State: Ontario
Country: Canada
Website: https://www.hectorkonomi.com/
