Focus Routines for Remote Workers is a practical guide for professionals who want to do meaningful work without burning themselves out. Written by Stewart Kennedy, the book addresses a problem that quietly defines modern remote work: attention is always under pressure while energy is slowly drained. Instead of offering rigid systems or extreme productivity tactics, the book reframes focus as something that must be designed around real life conditions, personal energy, and the realities of working from home. Drawing from the lived experience of remote work inside always connected digital environments, the book explains why traditional productivity advice often fails outside the office. It explores how tools, constant communication, blurred boundaries, and digital noise slowly erode focus over time. The message is clear and reassuring: focus problems are rarely personal failures. They are the result of environments and expectations that were never designed to support sustained attention. The book guides readers through how focus actually works, why energy must come before effort, and how to build routines that respect human limits. It covers physical and digital workspace design, realistic deep work practices at home, communication boundaries, and the emotional challenges of isolation and overwork. Each chapter emphasizes flexibility, consistency and self-awareness over intensity, helping readers replace guilt driven productivity with calm, repeatable progress. Focus Routines for Remote Workers is not about squeezing more hours out of the day. It is about reclaiming attention, reducing cognitive overload, and creating workdays that support both performance and well being. Designed to be used and revisited rather than rushed through, this book offers a grounded and humane approach to productivity for anyone navigating the demands of remote work.