I would echo what mardukm has said. Only the monks may be completely devoted to without distraction (after all, such is the life they have chosen to live), but every person is expected to do what they can do to shape their lives by the keeping of the the fasts (every Wednesday and Friday, plus the seasonal fasts such as those for Lent, Nativity, the Ninevites, etc), regularly reading the Bible and the Agpeya (the Coptic Book of the Hours), attending Vespers and Liturgy, giving alms, etc. You’ll see many Copts carry their Agpeyas with them in order to pray from it at the appropriate hour even if they are out and about, for instance. So I would say rather than having a separate “prayer life” (in the sense of “over here I keep my prayer life” or whatever

), it is integrated into the daily life to a very high degree.
Here is one Coptic Orthodox individual’s take on it, which I agree with (though I don’t have such a nice set-up here in my home, unfortunately; the only actual icons that I own are Russian, which my grandmother brought back from a trip to Russia in 1991, but I have a few of those little laminated card things [like the one in the video of HH Pope Cyril VI, which you can see when he is talking about the cross he uses during prayer; I have a cross like that, too, sent to me by a friend who got it from a monastery in Egypt] of Coptic saints like St. Macarius, which I’ll incorporate just like icons in my daily prayer).