Focus Session Tracker
Safety Boundary
This skill provides a lightweight framework for structuring focused work or study sessions. It is not a medical or therapeutic tool. It does not diagnose, treat, or manage attention-deficit disorders, anxiety, or any mental health condition. If you have persistent difficulty focusing that interferes with daily life, consult a qualified healthcare professional.
When to Use / When Not to Use
Use this skill when you want to:
- Plan and execute a single deep-work or study session.
- Capture distractions without acting on them immediately.
- Review what helped or hindered your focus after a session.
- Build a personal productivity ritual over time.
Do not use this skill to:
- Self-diagnose or self-treat attention or cognitive issues.
- Replace professional support for ADHD, anxiety, or related conditions.
- Force unhealthy work hours or ignore physical needs (sleep, meals, breaks).
Session Preparation (2–3 minutes)
Before starting, answer:
- Session Goal — What is the one concrete outcome I want by the end?
- Time Box — How long will I work? (Suggested: 25–90 minutes)
- Environment Check — Phone away? Notifications off? Materials ready?
- Break Plan — What will I do when the session ends?
Distraction Log Protocol
Distractions will happen. The goal is to capture them without breaking flow.
Quick-Capture Format
Keep a scratch pad or digital note beside you. When a distraction arises:
- Label it — internal (thought, worry, idea) or external (noise, notification, interruption).
- Note one word — enough to remember it later.
- Return immediately — do not act on it until the session ends.
Example Distraction Log
| Time (relative) | Type | Note | Action After Session? |
|---|---|---|---|
| +12 min | Internal | Idea for email campaign | Add to tomorrow's list |
| +28 min | External | Slack notification | Check after 4 PM block |
| +41 min | Internal | Grocery list item | Write it down at break |
Session Templates
Template A: The Standard Block (50/10)
- Work: 50 minutes
- Break: 10 minutes
- Best for: Tasks requiring sustained thinking (writing, coding, analysis)
Template B: The Sprint (25/5)
- Work: 25 minutes
- Break: 5 minutes
- Best for: Starting difficult tasks, short bursts, building momentum
Template C: The Long Flow (90/20)
- Work: 90 minutes
- Break: 20 minutes
- Best for: Deep creative work when you're already warmed up
Template D: The Variable Block
- Work: Self-chosen duration (30–120 minutes)
- Break: Proportional (roughly 1:5 ratio)
- Best for: Experienced practitioners who know their own rhythms
During the Session
- Work on the single goal defined at the start.
- Use the distraction log for everything else.
- If truly stuck for more than 5 minutes, pause and re-read the goal. Adjust if needed.
- Stay hydrated and seated comfortably (see desk-ergonomic-checklist skill if needed).
End-of-Session Review (3–5 minutes)
Answer these questions before moving on:
- Goal Achievement — Did I complete what I set out to do? If not, what remains?
- Focus Quality — Rate 1–5. What pulled me away?
- Distraction Patterns — Were most distractions internal or external?
- Environment — What helped? (music, silence, location, time of day)
- Next Adjustment — One thing to change for the next session.
Weekly Pattern Review
After 5–10 sessions, look back:
- What time of day do I focus best?
- Which session length feels most sustainable?
- What are my top 3 recurring distractions?
- What environmental changes had the biggest impact?
Use these insights to refine your default template.
Common Pitfalls
| Pitfall | Fix |
|---|---|
| No clear goal | Spend 2 minutes defining the outcome before starting |
| Skipping breaks | Schedule the break before the session begins |
| Ignoring body signals | Stand, stretch, or rest if pain or fatigue appears |
| Perfectionism about focus | A "3 out of 5" session is still progress |
| Back-to-back sessions | Insert at least a 10-minute reset between blocks |
Integration with Other Skills
- Pair with desk-ergonomic-checklist if you work long hours at a computer.
- Pair with hydration-rhythm-coach to maintain energy during deep work.
- Review weekly patterns in a personal journal or note system.
Differentiation: No app, timer, or tracking software required. Focuses on session-level structure, distraction capture, and reflective review rather than long-term habit tracking.