Protect mental energy with deep focus blocks
Mental energy depletes fastest through fragmented attention — protecting it means creating inviolable single-focus windows.
Why it works
Switching tasks forces the prefrontal cortex to re-establish task-set, a process that takes 15–25 minutes to reach full cognitive engagement and leaves attentional residue — lingering activation from the previous task — that impairs depth on the current one. A day of rapid context-switching depletes mental energy without ever producing the deep-work output that full engagement enables. Protecting 90-minute single-focus blocks is the highest-leverage mental energy management move available to knowledge workers.
How to do it
- Schedule your highest-cognitive-demand work in the 90-minute block following morning waking and light — this is when prefrontal resources are most replenished.
- Close email, messaging, and all background tabs before beginning a focus block.
- Use environmental signaling: headphones on, door closed, status set to unavailable — so others know not to interrupt.
- Do not check phone during the block; any interruption resets the 15–25-minute re-engagement cost.
Evidence
Task-switching costs and attention residue are well-documented in cognitive psychology; context switching prolongs re-engagement and reduces depth of processing on the current task. (observational)
Attention residue research is largely observational in work settings; the 15–25-minute re-engagement figure is an average that varies with task complexity and individual, and deep-focus blocks as a performance intervention have not been RCT-tested at scale.
Sources
- Leroy (2009), why is it so hard to do my work? The challenge of attention residue, Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes
Common mistake
Treating notifications as minor interruptions — each individual notification breaks the engagement and restarts the 15–25-minute re-engagement clock, so a notification every 10 minutes means you never reach peak cognitive engagement in the session.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach structures your highest-cognitive-demand tasks into protected focus blocks and uses your own reported output quality to identify when fragmentation is costing you mental energy.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).