Take a restorative nature walk

Walk in a green or natural setting to let directed attention recover.

Why it works

Directed attention fatigues when you suppress distractions to stay focused. Natural settings capture attention through soft fascination — clouds, water, foliage that hold the gaze without demanding effortful focus — so the directed-attention system can rest and replenish while you remain alert.

How to do it

  1. Choose a genuinely natural setting (park, trees, water) over a busy street.
  2. Leave the phone away or on do-not-disturb so attention is not pulled back to effortful tasks.
  3. Let your attention wander to whatever draws it, rather than directing it.

Evidence

Experimental studies have found that walks in nature, versus urban walks, improve performance on directed-attention tasks (e.g. backwards digit span) and mood. (rct)

Sample sizes are often modest and some findings are mixed; the cognitive boost is real but typically small-to-moderate, and the mood effect tends to be more robust than the attention effect.

Sources

  • Berman, Jonides & Kaplan (2008), cognitive benefits of interacting with nature, Psychological Science

Common mistake

Walking in nature while on a call or scrolling, which keeps directed attention engaged and removes the restorative effect the setting would otherwise provide.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach can prompt a restorative walk when your focus is flagging and frame it as deliberate recovery rather than a break you should feel guilty about.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).