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
- At each scheduled break, put the device away.
- Do something that requires minimal directed attention: look out the window, take a short walk, make a drink.
- 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.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).