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Multitasking is one of the most distinguished characteristics of modern human.

People increasingly
start to have more career paths than one, and to provide this, they attend extra universities and
improve their knowledge and skills in order to use them prolificly. This idea might seem to be
beneficial for individuals, however, it can also worsen their primary profession.

It is not uncommon for people who are occupied with too much subject to be unsuccessful at each
of their profession; they do not even have a profession, though, since they couldn’t reach a
professional level. As far as I am concerned, I do not really suggest people to have too many careers
if they are not proficiently yielding a qualified sum. Since the birth of agriculture, we humans had a
chance to focus some other things than finding food or staying safe, such as art, architecture,
philosophy, and even politics. Each of us eventually began to have their own subjects and
responsibilities. As time passed, this basic institutionalization became to evolve to a vital network.
When someone needed food, there was a cook, and when the cook needed something to cook,
there was a hunter or farmer. In our century, this relationship between people still keeps living, yet
it is not as simple as it was.

I shall state briefly, our benefit-based association is so multilayered and complex, but most
importantly, our whole economical and social bounds depend on it. As we weaken its building blocks
by not being efficient enough, we may harm the entire structure.

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