Building a Physical Distraction Blocker for Writers That Actually Works
After months of fighting digital distractions with apps that failed, I built a simple hardware device that finally let me write without interruption. Most digital wellness tools still live inside the same device they’re trying to tame, and in my experience, that’s usually why they fall apart. The problem isn’t that our phones lack settings — it’s that those settings rarely create enough resistance in the moment that matters. You can toggle focus mode a dozen times a day, but when the urge hits, it’s just one tap away from undoing all your good intentions. So I stepped outside the screen. A physical switch. A separate device. Something that doesn’t rely on willpower or software nudges. It sounds almost too simple to work — and honestly, I wasn’t sure it would. But it did. And now I’m wondering: if the solution to digital overload isn’t more software, but less of it — what else have we been overcomplicating? Why Software Solutions for Distraction Blocking Keep Failing Softwar...