I’ve been trying it out recently to some degree of success, finding the right intervals was the hard part, 25-5 feels like absolute torture to me.

Is anyone else giving it ago?

  • RQG@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    I’ve tried it a few times but so far it made things worse. Knowing there is a timer running just distracts me so much. Like I want to look at it or at least I think about it all the time.

  • Soleos@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    It helps me a lot for getting started and staying on task. I used to use the countdown timer with alarm, but now I use Windows stopwatch timer with it set to be always on top so it’s near the top right corner. Whenever I get an automatic impulse to open a distraction tab it helps me catch myself. I let it run until I notice I’m over 25 min. Then I decide to break or keep going. If I break, I set it to count up again so I see how much time I’ve spent on break. This seems to be a decent compromise for flexibility for me.

    • Hardeehar@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      25 mins studying, 5 min break.

      Repeat 4 times and on the 4th time it’s a 35 min break.

      Basically forces your brain to cool off and relax between studying time. You retain better over time but it depends on what you’re studying.

  • jeff 👨‍💻@programming.dev
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    9 hours ago

    Use it for tasks you tend to put off and don’t use it for tasks you tend to hyperfocus.

    Right now I mostly use it for boring time-consuming chores, otherwise I don’t bother.

    I will hyperfocus when I am coding at work, so I never use it then

  • renegadesporkA
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    13 hours ago

    I’ve found that it destroys my hyperfocus periods, which is the only time I’m actually able to be productive, so I stopped doing it.

    I don’t know how people get anything done with constant interruptions. My brain does that enough already.

  • Shou@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    Doesn’t work for me. The breaks break my focus entirely.

    What did work was “if I can study for 20min, I will have studied enough for today.” Which sometimes followed with hyperfocus resulting in studying for a time. 20min or 2hours were both victories in my book.

  • Water_Melon_boy@lemmy.zip
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    12 hours ago

    Works… sometimes. Could never really follow it, tried different versions of it(50-10, 40-20, 30-10) and results are mixed.

    I would say not to focus too much on the timer , get up and walk around if you feel like so, just remember to not touch addictive stuff in the breaktime (Video game, YT, etc…).

  • SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml
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    10 hours ago

    They definitely help me stay on track. I usually spend the 25 minutes on a hyper focus activity that I get lost in and could spend hours on, and the 5 minutes on a painful task like cooking where I wouldn’t know where to start and wouldn’t begin spontaneously (the 25 minute gap gives me time to plan what to do next, and the 5 minutes of manual work gives me time to check I didn’t get sidetracked on the main task)

  • snooggums@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    Did something similar before being diagnosed and it sucked and I hated it. Too rigid to maintain focus when I actually started to focus, too many interruptions.