If you’re in the flow, do you take the break anyway or skip it? If you skip it, it might be best to save the break up for later, so you get a longer break after longer work (somewhat like Third Time). As the academic research suggests, not surprisingly, that people need longer breaks after working longer.
I think making pomodoros longer when you’re in flow makes sense, as does making them shorter if you’re distracted because your attention span is short today. Though being distracted or interrupted by something external outside your control doesn’t seem a reason to shorten the next pomodoro.
I suspect it’s best to take breaks when you need to, but maybe within a given day that’s at a fairly constant interval—even if it varies from day to day depending on your energy and what you’re working on. Your method would be a way of homing in on that optimum length for the day. The academic literature (which I’m currently reading more of) unfortunately doesn’t have much research about whether it’s better in general for breaks to be fixed or taken whenever you like.
If you’re in the flow, do you take the break anyway or skip it?
I skip it (because in the flow I don’t want to be interrupted by a break) and start immediately the next pomodoro with longer interval.
If you skip it, it might be best to save the break up for later, so you get a longer break after longer work (somewhat like Third Time). As the academic research suggests, not surprisingly, that people need longer breaks after working longer.
Yes, sounds reasonable, I will probably make the breaks proportional to pomodoro length.
(1/3 feels like a bit too much though, e.g. 8 minute break for each 25 minute pomodoro. 1⁄5 to 1⁄4 would be closer to classic 25-5)
I think making pomodoros longer when you’re in flow makes sense, as does making them shorter if you’re distracted because your attention span is short today. Though being distracted or interrupted by something external outside your control doesn’t seem a reason to shorten the next pomodoro.
Yes, in fact it’s not automatic shortening/extending of the interval in my app, I just have convenient shortcuts for “start pomodoro 5 min longer / 5 min shorter / the same length”, so I sometimes decide to keep current interval, too.
(1/3 feels like a bit too much though, e.g. 8 minute break for each 25 minute pomodoro. 1⁄5 to 1⁄4 would be closer to classic 25-5)
Actually if you take into account the longer break every fourth Pomodoro it works out close to 1⁄3. (Office workers not following a system effectively use fractions more like 1⁄5, the research shows, but most of them don’t work in intense bursts.)
If you’re in the flow, do you take the break anyway or skip it? If you skip it, it might be best to save the break up for later, so you get a longer break after longer work (somewhat like Third Time). As the academic research suggests, not surprisingly, that people need longer breaks after working longer.
I think making pomodoros longer when you’re in flow makes sense, as does making them shorter if you’re distracted because your attention span is short today. Though being distracted or interrupted by something external outside your control doesn’t seem a reason to shorten the next pomodoro.
I suspect it’s best to take breaks when you need to, but maybe within a given day that’s at a fairly constant interval—even if it varies from day to day depending on your energy and what you’re working on. Your method would be a way of homing in on that optimum length for the day. The academic literature (which I’m currently reading more of) unfortunately doesn’t have much research about whether it’s better in general for breaks to be fixed or taken whenever you like.
I skip it (because in the flow I don’t want to be interrupted by a break) and start immediately the next pomodoro with longer interval.
Yes, sounds reasonable, I will probably make the breaks proportional to pomodoro length.
(1/3 feels like a bit too much though, e.g. 8 minute break for each 25 minute pomodoro. 1⁄5 to 1⁄4 would be closer to classic 25-5)
Yes, in fact it’s not automatic shortening/extending of the interval in my app, I just have convenient shortcuts for “start pomodoro 5 min longer / 5 min shorter / the same length”, so I sometimes decide to keep current interval, too.
Actually if you take into account the longer break every fourth Pomodoro it works out close to 1⁄3. (Office workers not following a system effectively use fractions more like 1⁄5, the research shows, but most of them don’t work in intense bursts.)