# 7-Day Life Reset: Focus

A no-login HourLife checklist for protect attention and finish one meaningful block each day.

- Area: Focus
- Intensity: Normal (25 minutes/day)
- Constraint: Low time
- Rule: Do one focused rep daily and write a two-sentence reflection.
- Adjustment: Use the first open 10-minute window. Do not wait for a perfect block.
- Anchor book: Deep Work by Cal Newport

## 7-Day Checklist

- [ ] Day 1: Choose one task that would make today feel successful.
  - Timebox: 25 minutes
  - Constraint move: Use the first open 10-minute window. Do not wait for a perfect block.
  - Reflection: What made this easier or harder than expected?
- [ ] Day 2: Block 25 minutes with phone out of reach.
  - Timebox: 25 minutes
  - Constraint move: Use the first open 10-minute window. Do not wait for a perfect block.
  - Reflection: What would make tomorrow's version 20% easier?
- [ ] Day 3: Write the next physical action before you start.
  - Timebox: 25 minutes
  - Constraint move: Use the first open 10-minute window. Do not wait for a perfect block.
  - Reflection: What did this reveal about your default behavior?
- [ ] Day 4: Delete or defer one low-value commitment.
  - Timebox: 25 minutes
  - Constraint move: Use the first open 10-minute window. Do not wait for a perfect block.
  - Reflection: What made this easier or harder than expected?
- [ ] Day 5: Do one focused sprint before opening feeds or inboxes.
  - Timebox: 25 minutes
  - Constraint move: Use the first open 10-minute window. Do not wait for a perfect block.
  - Reflection: What would make tomorrow's version 20% easier?
- [ ] Day 6: Review where your attention leaked and redesign one trigger.
  - Timebox: 25 minutes
  - Constraint move: Use the first open 10-minute window. Do not wait for a perfect block.
  - Reflection: What did this reveal about your default behavior?
- [ ] Day 7: Repeat the best focus block from the week.
  - Timebox: 25 minutes
  - Constraint move: Use the first open 10-minute window. Do not wait for a perfect block.
  - Reflection: What made this easier or harder than expected?

## Book Fuel

1. The ability to focus without distraction is no longer a nice-to-have; it is the central skill for producing work that cannot be copied quickly.
2. Busyness is often a disguise for shallow work. The scoreboard that matters is hours spent in high-intensity concentration.
3. Every quick check of a message leaves residue behind. The cost is not the minute you lost, but the clarity that fails to return.

## Extra Actions

- [ ] Schedule one protected depth block: Pick a 60- to 90-minute window tomorrow, define the single outcome before it starts, and keep email, chat, and phone out of reach until the block ends.
- [ ] Create a shutdown ritual: End the workday by reviewing open loops, writing tomorrow's first deep task, and saying clearly that the day is done.
- [ ] Keep a depth scoreboard: Track only completed deep work hours for one week. The visible count will reveal whether focus is a stated value or an actual habit.

Generated by HourLife.