Use a routine physical task to incubate a creative problem
Assign your stuck creative problem to your mind, then do a boring manual task and let the problem run in the background.
Why it works
Incubation — the classic stage of creative insight — appears to occur when a problem is handed off to unconscious processing while the conscious mind is occupied with an undemanding task. Low-demand physical activity (dishes, walking, folding laundry) occupies enough of executive attention to prevent deliberate problem-solving while still allowing the DMN to process the problem’s elements. This is why many people report insights in the shower — a classic low-demand, no-screen environment.
How to do it
- When stuck on a creative or analytical problem, write the problem statement clearly on a card.
- Read the card once to load the problem.
- Put the card away and immediately begin a boring, screen-free manual task for 20–30 minutes.
- Keep a notebook nearby — insights often arrive mid-task or just after.
Evidence
Incubation effects are among the better-documented findings in creativity research: taking a break from a problem — particularly with an intervening low-demand task — increases the rate of insight solutions compared to continuous focused effort. (observational)
Incubation meta-analyses show positive effects but with heterogeneous effect sizes; the conditions that maximize incubation benefit (type of intervening task, problem type) are still being clarified.
Sources
- Dijksterhuis & Meurs (2006), where creativity resides: the generative power of unconscious thought, Consciousness and Cognition
- Sio & Ormerod (2009), does incubation enhance problem solving? meta-analysis, Psychological Bulletin
Common mistake
Choosing a moderately demanding task as the "boring" intervening activity — cognitively demanding tasks compete with the problem for processing resources and reduce incubation benefit.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach’s "stuck" protocol asks you to state your problem, then suggests a 20-minute screen-free task before returning to the problem — operationalizing incubation into the coaching session.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).