For a long time, I could not stop replying to messages right away.
Text message.
Group chat.
Even emails that were not urgent.
If my phone buzzed, I felt like I had to answer.
No one told me to. It just felt wrong not to.
One afternoon, I was folding laundry when my phone buzzed three times in a row. I stopped. I picked it up. I answered. When I put it down, I had lost my place again.
That night, I realized something.
Most of my day felt interrupted.
So I tried something small.
When a message came in, I waited ten minutes before replying.
Not an hour. Not all day. Just ten minutes.
The first few days were hard. I kept looking at the phone. I kept thinking maybe it was urgent.
It almost never was.
After a week, I noticed I finished more things in one go. Laundry didn’t take as long. Cleaning the kitchen felt smoother. I wasn’t constantly stopping and starting.
After a few weeks, it became normal.
The phone would buzz, and I wouldn’t move right away. Sometimes I didn’t even feel the same pull.
I still reply.
I just don’t rush.
Ten minutes doesn’t sound like much. But ten minutes, repeated every day, changed the way my days feel.
I don’t feel as scattered.
I don’t feel as reactive.
Nothing big happened.
But over time, the interruptions became fewer.
And that built up into something steadier.
Over time, those small pauses added up. I was less distracted. I finished what I started more often. Waiting ten minutes did not change everything at once, but repeating it every day slowly changed the way I move through my day.
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