I Tried the World's Simplest Productivity Trick (it worked)
What if the secret to peak productivity isn't another app or hack, but literally staring at a wall? Facing one of the most stressful projects of his career, this creator stripped away every digital distraction — no music, no podcasts, no screens outside of essential work — and replaced them with something radical: intentional boredom. As important stakeholders grew nervous and sentiment turned negative, could a week of wall-staring and extreme focus salvage the project? And what happens when you finally give your brain permission to do absolutely nothing?
Puntos clave
Wall-staring for 10–15 minutes acts as a neural reset, clearing mental clutter and making it dramatically easier to enter flow state afterward. It's the closest thing to starting your day over.
Mental bandwidth is finite and fragments easily. Every input you allow — email, metrics, social media — takes up space in your mind for the entire day, not just the moment you check it.
Working on anything before your most important task gives secondary priorities prime mental real estate. Tackle your one key focus first, before your brain has competition.
Presence isn't just a productivity win — it improves relationships and quality of life. More mental bandwidth makes you available to notice and enjoy the small moments that make life rich.
Screens are input hubs that fragment attention. Pen and paper preserve mental clarity by eliminating notifications, colors, icons, and the temptation to check just one more thing.
En resumen
Preserving mental bandwidth is the key to both deep focus and presence in life. By ruthlessly cutting inputs and giving your most important work the first claim on your attention, you unlock flow states that feel almost effortless — and discover how much richer ordinary moments become when your mind isn't fragmented across a dozen competing thoughts.
The Protocol: Three Rules to Reclaim Your Focus
Day One: The Struggle Begins
Cutting out all non-essential screens feels broken at first — but reveals how distracted we've become.
Walking into work after holiday break, the creator commits to a radical experiment: no editing videos before work, no Spotify, no calculator app, no non-essential screens during or outside of work. The motivation is urgent — he's working on an extremely difficult project that's supposed to solve one of the biggest problems in his company, and sentiment among stakeholders has turned negative. People are nervous, and he has to pull through.
The first day is brutal. «This kind of sucks. I don't know if my brain is broken or what, but I had gotten used to letting myself get distracted at work,» he admits. There's a point in his day where he typically slows down and turns on a video or podcast. Now he can't do any of that. The first 10-minute wall-staring session feels awkward and two-dimensional, but something shifts afterward. After work, he finds himself itching to play drums for the first time in months, and a walk with his wife Kate feels unusually present and enjoyable.
The realization hits: «It's really nice to have a single work to do and then enjoy your life outside of that. Just have space.» He's rediscovered what it feels like to not be mentally fragmented. But he also wonders if he can sustain this while juggling a full-time job and growing a YouTube channel.
The Wall-Staring Progression
Each session goes deeper, from awkward distraction to a half-conscious state that resets the brain.
Day 1: 10 minutes — Scratching the Surface It's two-dimensional, just you and a wall. Hard to know what to do or how intently to look. Stick it out, don't look away, and you open the door to something deeper.
Day 2: 12 minutes — The Throbbing Head starts feeling weird, almost throbbing, hard to keep upright. Eventually you relax, focus on the light creeping across the wall. It warps and breathes, pulling you in until you have to look away.
Day 3: 20 minutes — The Fusion Neural reset happens much quicker. You come in and out of consciousness, but the longer you go, the less you resist. You reach a half-conscious, half-unconscious state, almost perfectly fused with the wall.
Day 4: 25 minutes — Overstaying Your Welcome The throbbing returns with a vengeance. You stop seeing details, looking through the wall rather than at it. Then suddenly you're back in your chair with 9 minutes left, totally out of it. This is too long.
Day 5: 30 minutes — Instant Dial-In, Diminishing Returns At this point you can look at the wall and instantly reach the deepest level. No thoughts, body completely numb. But 30 minutes is overkill — you come to with 10 minutes left, just waiting for it to end.
The Email Catastrophe: How One Click Fragments Your Day
Checking email mid-workday introduced thoughts that lingered for hours, proving a critical insight about focus.
On Thursday, the creator made his first serious mistake. While ordering something for a thumbnail, he checked his email and YouTube stats, saw comments, and found an interesting message from a brand wanting to use his footage. «Immediately I'm jumping on that, trying to email them back, do some business, but all of a sudden, it's been like 20 minutes in the middle of a work day,» he explains. He thought he could just let these thoughts in for a second, but they didn't go away.
This led to the most important breakthrough of the week. He realized that when you introduce other things like business email or YouTube studio, they don't leave. They stay in the back of your mind all day, competing with your main task and shrinking your mental bandwidth. «Once you open a door, it's open. You can't close it again,» he warns. You welcome whatever you focus on, and it takes up mental real estate for the rest of the day.
The struggle to not keep thinking about the email, to not check for follow-ups, made the rest of the workday significantly harder. It was a visceral lesson in how fragile focus really is — and how careful you need to be about what you let into your mind.
Mental Bandwidth: The Core Model
Every focus point takes up mental real estate; preserve bandwidth to maximize productivity and presence.
Mental Bandwidth: The Core Model
Mental bandwidth is your total capacity to focus on anything. Every time you devote focus to something, it takes some of that up and you have less left. Things you focus on can be inputs (reading, consuming) or outputs (writing, creating). The key insight: the more mental bandwidth you preserve, the better your focus and the more present you are. Having more bandwidth left makes you available for the little stuff that makes life rich.
Before vs. After: The Bandwidth Illusion
What felt like a balanced split between work and YouTube was actually extreme fragmentation.
The Turnaround: From Nervous to Excited
A week of extreme focus transformed a failing project into one everyone was excited about.
At the beginning of the week, people were nervous. The project had been going on for months, things had gotten messy before the end of the year, and the sentiment was not good. By Tuesday, the creator had developed a baseline solution to one of the biggest issues. On Wednesday, he showed a working form to leadership in a meeting and «everybody loved it.» His manager said it was «gas.» By Thursday, he sent a video of his mockup to the team and got enthusiastic responses, including from the chief product officer who sent an excited GIF.
By Friday, the sentiment had completely flipped. «Everyone is excited. The sentiment has totally changed. People are like, when can we get this thing out?» The project went from uncertain and failing to something people felt confident about — all in a single week. «I think this really was an important moment and I showed up for it,» he reflects. The extreme focus routine didn't just help him survive a stressful week; it allowed him to deliver a level of work that changed the trajectory of an entire project.
Beyond work, he noticed he was enjoying time with Kate more. She observed that the vibe in the house felt more relaxed, and it even inspired her to be on her phone less. The quality of their time together improved not because they had more time, but because he was more centered and present.
Four Recommendations for Anyone
The Magic Trick That Actually Works
Wall-staring unlocks flow states and resets the brain in ways that feel almost miraculous.
“I still don't know how to describe how it feels afterwards, but I proceeded to go into absolute lock in flow state mode for hours. The wall steering is like a magic trick. I thought it would be more of a gimmick.”
Personas
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