The Zeigarnik effect comes from the work of Bluma Zeigarnik in the 1920s.
Its original finding was surprisingly simple:
People tend to remember unfinished tasks better than completed ones.
The story goes that Zeigarnik noticed waiters remembered unpaid orders very well, but once the bill was settled, the details quickly faded.
Why?
Because the unfinished task creates a kind of cognitive tension.
The mind keeps a bookmark open.
Completion closes the loop.
The classical version
Imagine:
- You solve 10 math problems.
- You are interrupted after problem 5.
Days later,
you are more likely to remember:
Problem 5.
not
Problems 1–4.
The unfinished task remains psychologically active.
Why it mattered in the 20th century
The world Zeigarnik lived in was still largely a world of:
- projects
- professions
- careers
- books
- letters
- long conversations
The problem was:
Sometimes we cannot finish.
The Zeigarnik effect explained why unfinished business lingers.
In psychotherapy, this became important.
A trauma can be understood as an experience that never reached closure.
The psyche keeps returning.
Freud would have recognized this immediately.
But our world is different
This is where your question becomes fascinating.
In 2026, the problem is often not:
One unfinished task.
The problem is:
500 unfinished tasks.
A typical day:
- 43 unread emails
- 12 browser tabs
- 5 books half-read
- 3 unfinished chats
- 7 news stories
- 1,000 algorithmic interruptions
The modern mind is swimming in open loops.
The original Zeigarnik effect assumed:
Completion is normal.
Interruption is exceptional.
Today the opposite may be true:
Interruption is normal.
Completion is exceptional.
The Attention Economy’s Secret
This is one reason social media is so powerful.
Many platforms exploit a Zeigarnik-like mechanism.
Consider:
- endless feeds
- cliffhangers
- notifications
- “someone replied”
- “new message”
- “recommended for you”
Each creates:
an unfinished cognitive loop.
Your attention returns because something remains unresolved.
Not because it is important.
Because it is incomplete.
What happens when everything is unfinished?
This is the question Zeigarnik never faced.
The mind evolved to track a manageable number of unfinished matters.
Not thousands.
When the number becomes enormous:
the effect may reverse.
Instead of motivation, you get:
- overload
- fragmentation
- fatigue
- learned avoidance
The psyche starts dropping bookmarks.
A Rosa interpretation
Since you’ve often discussed Hartmut Rosa,
I think Rosa would say:
Modern acceleration transforms
unfinished projects
into
permanent background noise.
The result is not tension.
The result is exhaustion.
You no longer hear a single unfinished melody.
You hear static.
A psychoanalytic interpretation
Freud might have seen neurosis as:
a few powerful unfinished stories.
Today’s problem is different.
It is not one trauma.
It is often:
thousands of micro-interruptions.
The psyche is continuously prevented from consolidating experience.
Life becomes:
- notification
- interruption
- notification
- interruption
without digestion.
A 菊次郎 interpretation
This is where your own thinking becomes relevant.
You often speak of:
walking
van life
Bashō
sitting by the river
looking at a rock
These activities do something peculiar.
They allow loops to close.
Not because problems are solved.
But because attention stays long enough for experience to settle.
Bashō’s frog haiku is almost anti-Zeigarnik:
The frog jumps.
The splash happens.
Nothing remains open.
No notification follows.
No algorithm asks for another click.
The moment completes itself.
So perhaps the Zeigarnik effect of our age is no longer:
unfinished tasks are remembered.
But rather:
too many unfinished tasks colonize consciousness.
And the challenge is no longer finishing everything.
That is impossible.
The challenge becomes:
choosing which unfinished things deserve to remain unfinished,
and which deserve a quiet ending.
That strikes me as very close to what you’ve been exploring through 菊次郎十六式.
Not closure of everything.
Just enough completion
to hear the river again.