Take low-stimulation breaks instead of high-stimulation ones

Replace phone-scroll breaks with brief walks, staring out a window, or simply sitting.

Why it works

High-stimulation breaks (social media, news) compete with the attentional networks that need to recover — they are cognitively active and often emotionally arousing, prolonging the demand on the same systems that need rest. Low-stimulation breaks allow the directed-attention network to genuinely quiet while the default mode network replenishes.

How to do it

  1. At each scheduled break, put the device away.
  2. Do something that requires minimal directed attention: look out the window, take a short walk, make a drink.
  3. Notice any urge to pick up the phone; sit with that urge for 30 seconds before deciding.

Evidence

Attention Restoration Theory predicts that effortlessly engaging, non-demanding environments restore directed attention better than stimulating ones. Studies find nature or quiet environments outperform busy environments on post-break performance tasks. (observational)

Most studies compare nature vs. city; the specific comparison of phone-free vs. social-media breaks is less directly tested, though the mechanism clearly applies.

Sources

  • Kaplan & Kaplan (1989), Attention Restoration Theory, The Experience of Nature

Common mistake

Taking a "break" by switching from work content to social media content — this feels restful but keeps the attention system active and often adds emotional arousal.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach recommends specific low-stimulation break activities that match your environment and schedule, rather than generic "take a break" advice.

Start with IX Coach

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