How do you guys feel about the Pomodoro Technique?
How do you guys feel about the Pomodoro Technique?
How long have you been trying it out for?
It may just need tweaking so it fits your goals.
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.
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.
What did work was “if I can study for 20min, I will have studied enough for today.”
I’ve had mixed results with this approach. On one hand, the constant interruptions don’t work at all for me. But it’s an uphill fight to really feel like that 20 minutes (or whatever) is “enough.” I often feel like if I start, I have to finish, or else I risk not picking it back up again. It’s frustrating and makes me want to put my head through a wall.
That “I have to finish” only made me more reluctant to start. Was able to drop it by learning how to let go of perfectionism.
It’s better to do 20min quality, is better than nothing or 7hours of unfocussed slogging.
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…).
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
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.
It’s a great starting point. Live it, customize it to your needs, internalize it, then discard it like training wheels
When I finish a task, I get up and walk. When I get frustrated, I get up and walk. When I think I’ve found the answer, I get up and walk. When I realize I’m on the wrong path, I get up and walk
Over learning does nothing but bore me, sometimes a task is so easy I plow through the next one, sometimes a task is too big or I reach a good stopping point and walk to recollect myself. I don’t need to think about it anymore
I don’t need a timer anymore, my body is a variable timer - time is subjective after all. But I used pompdoro to instill the habit, then I grew beyond it - my version might not work for you, maybe you’ll even need the timer - but it’s a great technique, so use it, take the good and discard the useless, and adapt it to you over time
Love it, nothing would get done without it. A few tricks and changes I applied over the decades:
One of the things I love about it is that it gives a unit of measure. It’s no longer like: I want to be a programmer, so I have to do this for a couple of years with no clear end. It’s a unit of progress that can go on a todo-list and be checked off.
So yes, for learning new things, it’s still my way to go. Usually with 1 unit per day only, 45 minutes, sometimes 25. Most other tasks offer a different breakdown. E. g. cleaning up - can’t just do it. But it is less threatening with checkable tasks like: 1. put all garbage in a bag. 2. put all non-foods in box 1. 3. …
It works for me but I double up the time, like 50minutes study and 10 minutes breaks, or 100minutes study and 20 minutes breaks. 25minutes makes me overwhelmed because so many times to take a breaks and I don’t like it.
Even I double the time, I will stop for a moment if I need to get a pee or drink a water so I still focus because getting hydrated is important.