← Home

Why 10 Minutes of Nothing

Ten deliberate minutes of doing nothing reduce attention residue, improve vigor (fatigue ↓), and can nudge the autonomic nervous system toward balance (HRV ↑). It's long enough to reset, short enough to be realistic every day.

What's special about 10 minutes?

  • Clears attention residue. Short, intentional pauses help the mind fully detach from the previous task and re‑engage with the next.
  • Fits the micro‑break window. Meta‑analysis: micro‑breaks (≤10 min) reliably improve well‑being; performance effects trend upward with slightly longer breaks.
  • Physiologically meaningful (optional breathing). ~10 minutes at ~6 breaths/min often increases heart‑rate variability (HRV), indicating better autonomic balance.

The science, briefly

  1. Attention residue — task switching leaves a cognitive after‑image that hurts next‑task performance; pausing reduces it.
  2. Micro‑breaks work — systematic review (22 studies, n≈2,335): vigor ↑, fatigue ↓; performance effects depend on task, with upward trend for slightly longer micro‑breaks.
  3. Slow breathing & HRV — 6 breaths/min (≈0.1 Hz) commonly elevates HRV and supports calm regulation; the pause still works without breath work.
  4. Context: brief naps/movement — adjacent literature shows short naps or light movement can boost alertness; we don't prescribe them here, but they live on the same time scale.

How to use this pause

  1. Open the app.
  2. Put the device down (or hide the screen).
  3. Don't touch for 10 minutes. Breathe naturally, or follow the breathing dot.

Tip: If you catch yourself evaluating ("Is this working?"), notice that impulse and let it pass.

When 5 or 15 might be better

  • 5 minutes for quick context switches.
  • 10 minutes for most slate‑clearing pauses.
  • 15 minutes for deeper recovery (e.g., after heavy focus). If you regularly need 15+, schedule real rest — this tool is for frequent, low‑friction resets.

Why privacy and minimalism matter

No sign‑in, no feed, no streaks, no prompts. A blank screen reduces cognitive load and makes the pause easier to take. Privacy is a feature here.

References

  1. Leroy, S. (2009). Why is it so hard to do my work? The challenge of attention residue when switching between work tasks. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 109(2), 168–181. DOI: 10.1016/j.obhdp.2009.04.002
  2. Albulescu, P. et al. (2022). Give me a break! A systematic review and meta‑analysis on the efficacy of micro‑breaks. PLOS ONE, 17(8): e0263293. https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0263293
  3. Laborde, S., Zammit, N., & Mosley, E. (2022). Slow‑paced breathing and HRV: systematic review/meta‑analysis. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews. (Search on Google Scholar: "Laborde 2022 slow‑paced breathing HRV NBR review".)
  4. Schwerdtfeger, A. R. et al. (2020). HRV and 0.1 Hz resonance: mechanisms and practical relevance. Psychophysiology. (Scholar search: "Schwerdtfeger 2020 psychophysiology resonance 0.1 Hz".)
  5. Brooks, A., & Lack, L. (2006). A brief afternoon nap following lunch can improve cognitive performance. Journal of Sleep Research, 15(3), 272–277. (Scholar search: "Brooks Lack 2006 brief nap performance".)