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How do you guys feel about the Pomodoro Technique?

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?

25 comments
  • 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.

  • After mediocre performance at school and undergraduate degree, I started using Pomodoro for my masters and crushed it. It helped significantly by keeping me on task. If you’re interested, I highly recommend you try it and see if it works for you.

  • 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

  • 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)

  • Love it, nothing would get done without it. A few tricks and changes I applied over the decades:

    • When you are in a hard spot, or habit building, or a child, 25 minutes can be too much. How about 10 minutes. The thought that after those 10 minutes I'll be more skilled at X than ever before IN MY LIFE can be quite motivating.
    • Similarly, how about just ONE session? Seems ridiculous, but what I got done with that over 10 years is nothing short of amazing.
    • Be super-serious about it. You can get water upfront, you can go to the toilet, but not once the session started. It's essentially Squid Game, and only the player who crammed the most into their head survives. If you have to pee, you pee in your pants. You don't get water. When you do break the rules, e. g. because there is literally a fire (react to fire only if survival chance is < 90 %), the session is marked as failed and you are done for the day. It's DEFINITELY better than half-assing two sessions even a little bit, like reacting to a phone buzz or door bell or getting water.
    • Audio-Log. Your task is serious (see above), it's like reviving a frozen Neanderthal. Example: "It's Jan 1 2025 3 p.m. Ready to start the 25 minute countdown and point of no return ... now. Ok, max performance needed. Item of highest priority: Find position in book and recap what we learned yesterday with a 42 second timebox. Note: After 42 seconds, acquisition of new information directly will become more effective than preparing for it. Timebox counting down now on second timer. ..." I just hope nobody ever finds my audio logs, or I'm in the nuthouse for good.

    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. ...

  • 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.

25 comments