I did not get calmer by reading grand books about attention or by taking a week-long digital detox in the woods. I got calmer by doing five small, mildly annoying things every day that quietly changed the texture of my working hours.
They are not clever. They do not require an app. They required me to accept that my willpower is unreliable, that my phone is designed by people who are smarter than I am, and that the only durable way to protect my attention is to make the distracting thing physically harder to reach.
None of this is prescriptive. I am not a psychologist or a productivity coach, just a writer who spent long enough being fractured to try things and keep the ones that stuck. Different setups will suit different lives. But these are the five that made the largest difference for me, in roughly the order of impact.
1. The phone goes in another room
The single change that moved the needle most is also the least sophisticated. When I sit down to write, my phone is not on the desk, not face-down on the desk, not in a drawer within reach. It is in another room, on charge. If I want it, I have to stand up and walk to get it.
The reason this works is not that I am strong-willed while it is away. It is that even glancing at it — or the tiny anticipation of glancing at it — is enough to pull me out of whatever I was in the middle of. It’s often-cited that it takes around 23 minutes to fully regain focus after an interruption. My own experience matches the direction of that finding, if not the exact number. When the phone is in the room, the day fragments. When it isn’t, the day holds.
2. All tabs closed before I start
Before I begin any block of real work, I close every browser tab that is not directly needed for the thing I am doing. Email, social media, half-read articles, the tab I opened to check something at eleven the night before and never got back to. All gone.
Open tabs function as an open phone does. Each one is a small waiting invitation, and the second something in the actual work feels hard, the mind reaches sideways for the easier thing. If it isn’t there, the mind stays with the harder thing a little longer, which is where the work happens.
3. Time blocking, in long blocks
I work in blocks of around ninety minutes. Nothing else during that window — not messages, not emails, not “quick” tasks. When the block is done, I take a real break: get up, leave the desk, often walk to a different cafe before I start the next one.
The specifics matter less than the principle. I tried the twenty-five-minute Pomodoro Technique and it did not fit me — by the time I had settled into what I was doing, the timer was already going off. Longer blocks let me get past the friction of starting and into the part where the work is actually pulling me rather than the other way around. It also flattens the day; there is less small back-and-forth between contexts, and correspondingly less low-level stress about being behind.
4. On walks, the phone stays in my pocket
When I go for a walk, my phone comes with me, but it stays in my pocket. I do not put music or a podcast on. I do not glance at it at traffic lights. This is not principled abstinence — plenty of times a message pings and I fight the urge — but the general rule holds.
A walk with the phone in the pocket is different from a walk with the phone in the hand. The first is where actual thinking happens. Problems I have been chewing over at the desk quietly resolve themselves on a route I have walked a hundred times, in a way they simply do not when I am filling the walk with someone else’s voice. It has a light empirical backing too: a 2008 study by Marc Berman, John Jonides, and Stephen Kaplan at the University of Michigan found that a walk in a natural setting measurably improved participants’ directed-attention performance, in a way an equivalent walk down a city street did not. It is also the closest thing I have to a reset button.
5. Rain sounds instead of music while working
When I work in cafes (which is most afternoons), I put in headphones and play rain sounds on YouTube. Not lo-fi study playlists, not instrumental jazz, and definitely not music with lyrics. Just rain.
Anything with words in it pulls a portion of my attention sideways to process what is being said. The research points the same way: a 2023 review in the Journal of Cognition found that music with lyrics interferes with cognitive tasks in a way instrumental music does not, particularly for reading and language-heavy work. Rain gives me the useful part of ambient noise — a masking layer over the cafe’s chatter — without giving my language brain a second thing to chew on. It is dull and it works, which is roughly the pattern with all five of these.
Final thoughts
None of this is exciting. None of it is Instagrammable. If any of it is worth trying, it is because attention is where the actual quality of a working day lives, and the tools that most reliably protect it are boring physical arrangements, not clever mental tricks. My phone is in another room right now. My tabs are closed. It is raining, sort of, in my headphones. And I am — for the length of this paragraph, at least — actually here.









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