Protect a block of uninterrupted attention

Flow needs a runway — eliminate interruptions before you start.

Why it works

Flow takes time to build and is destroyed by interruption; once attention is broken, re-entry is costly because the absorbed state has to be rebuilt from scratch. Removing potential interruptions in advance protects the continuous concentration that the state requires, since you cannot defend attention reactively once you are already deep in.

How to do it

  1. Block a protected window long enough to build absorption (not a few scattered minutes).
  2. Remove the likely interrupters in advance — notifications, open tabs, ambient pings.
  3. Tell people you’re unreachable for the window rather than fielding interruptions as they come.

Evidence

Flow’s requirement of sustained, undivided concentration is central to Csikszentmihalyi’s account, and attention-research consistently documents the high switching cost of interruption. (observational)

The protective effect of removing interruptions is well-motivated but typically inferred rather than directly tested as a flow manipulation.

Common mistake

Trying to find flow in fragmented time between meetings and messages, when the state needs an uninterrupted runway to build at all.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach helps you plan and defend a real focus block, clearing the predictable interrupters before you start instead of fighting them mid-session.

Start with IX Coach

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