In contemporary digital culture, human attention is increasingly controlled by a disruptive algorithmic system. This fragmentation reorients desire toward visibility and immediacy rather than interior transformation, creating an attention inequality that prioritizes certain "visible" populations through algorithmic exploitation. As humanity today is being formed in a digitally advanced era, this paper argues that attention can function as a formative spiritual practice that orients the soul towards God and ultimately cultivates the ability to love and serve others in the light of God's Love. Drawing from Simone Weil's understanding of attention, that attention is a receptive act which requires detachment and self-emptying to receive the True Knowledge/Truth; St. Teresa of Avila's interior prayer that gathers attention toward the indwelling God within human soul; and St. John of the Cross's way of purification of desire and detachment to receive the Divine Grace, provide a mystical pedagogy of attention that will be a counter-formation to digital fragmentation in contemporary times. Finally, this paper argues that contemplative prayer that emphasizes attention is helping address the inequities of the digital attention; a practice which not simply a withdrawal from the world, but a practice that cultivates human capacity to be present, compassionate, and more loving, to God, self, and others, by reframing human attention back toward indwelling God rather than outward toward the world.