The morning I deleted Todoist, my thumb hovered over the icon for maybe ten seconds. Then Notion went. Then Trello. Then the Pomodoro timer, the habit tracker, the colour-coded Google Calendar blocks, the weekly review spreadsheet I’d spent an entire weekend building. All of it, gone. And I just sat there staring at a home screen that looked like I’d bought the phone an hour ago.
Honestly, the strangest part wasn’t the deletion itself. It was the silence after. My brain kept reaching for something to check, something to reorganize, some queue to review. There was nothing. I felt like I’d walked out of the house without pants on — exposed in a way I couldn’t immediately name. For years, I’d run a personal development website writing about mindfulness and presence, and the entire time I’d been drowning in systems for my systems. I had a morning routine that took ninety minutes before I even opened my laptop. And I felt incredibly, relentlessly behind.
So there I was, eighteen months ago, with a blank screen and no scaffolding. And something genuinely unexpected happened — my output doubled. Not gradually. Almost immediately.
The productivity trap nobody warns you about
Here’s what I’ve come to understand about productivity culture, and I say this as someone who bought into it completely. Most of it isn’t about getting things done. It’s about feeling like you’re getting things done. There’s a massive difference.
When I had all those systems running, I spent an extraordinary amount of time managing the systems themselves. Reorganizing tasks between apps. Tweaking templates. Watching YouTube videos about someone else’s Notion setup. Adjusting priorities, colour codes, labels. It felt productive. It had all the texture of work – the focus, the decision-making, the sense of forward motion. But almost none of it was actual output.
I was confusing the management of work with the doing of work. And I think a lot of people are stuck in exactly the same loop without realizing it.
What happened when the scaffolding came down
The first week without any apps was genuinely uncomfortable. I felt exposed, like I’d walked out of the house without my phone. My brain kept reaching for the system – wanting to log something, categorize something, schedule something. The urge to organize was almost physical.
But without anything to organize into, I did something radical. I just started working.
I opened a document and wrote. Not after a morning routine. Not after reviewing my priorities matrix. Not after checking what my habit tracker said about yesterday’s performance. I just sat down and did the thing I’d been elaborately preparing to do for years.
And it turns out that when you remove the ritual around work, you find out pretty quickly what actually needs doing. Without a task manager telling me I had forty-seven items across six projects, I naturally gravitated toward the two or three things that actually mattered. My brain already knew what was important. I’d just been drowning out its signal with organizational noise.
The uncomfortable truth about why we over-optimize
I’ve thought a lot about why I built such an elaborate productivity infrastructure in the first place, and I don’t think the answer is flattering. It wasn’t because I had so much to do that I needed complex systems to manage it. It was because the systems gave me a sense of control that the actual work didn’t.
Writing is uncertain. Building something is uncertain. You sit down and you don’t know if what you produce will be any good. That ambiguity is uncomfortable. But reorganizing your Trello board? That’s clean. That’s completable. You drag a card from one column to another and your brain gets a tiny hit of accomplishment without any of the risk.
I think a lot of productivity obsession is actually anxiety in disguise. We’re not optimizing because we need to be more efficient. We’re optimizing because the optimization itself soothes a fear that we’re not doing enough, not structured enough, not in control enough. The system becomes the security blanket.
Buddhism has a concept that maps onto this perfectly – it’s called “papanca,” sometimes translated as mental proliferation. It’s the mind’s tendency to take something simple and spin it into layers of complexity, narrative, and elaboration. You have one task to do, and your mind turns it into a project with subtasks, dependencies, deadlines, and contingency plans. Not because the task requires it, but because the mind can’t resist complicating things.
My entire productivity setup was papanca in app form.
What I actually do now
My system now is so simple it barely qualifies as a system. I have a single notebook – paper, not digital – and each morning I write down the three things I’m going to do that day. Not the fifteen things I could do. Not a brain dump of everything on my mind. Three things. The ones that will actually move something forward.
That’s it. That’s the entire system.
Some days I finish all three by lunchtime and the afternoon is free. Some days one of the three turns out to be bigger than expected and takes the whole day. Either way, I go to bed knowing I did the things that mattered instead of spreading myself across a dozen tasks and finishing none of them properly.
I also stopped batching my time into rigid blocks. The Pomodoro technique – twenty-five minutes on, five minutes off – never actually worked for me. Some tasks need twenty minutes. Some need three unbroken hours. Forcing everything into identical time containers meant I was constantly interrupting flow states to take breaks I didn’t need, or trying to squeeze deep work into slots too small to hold it.
Now I work until the work tells me to stop. Sometimes that’s forty minutes. Sometimes it’s half a day. I trust the rhythm of the task itself rather than imposing an artificial one on top of it.
The mindfulness connection I didn’t expect
Here’s the thing I find genuinely ironic. I spent years writing about mindfulness and presence while simultaneously building a productivity system designed to keep me perpetually focused on the future – what’s next, what’s scheduled, what’s overdue. The system was the opposite of presence. It was a machine for living two steps ahead of the current moment.
Since stripping it all back, I’ve noticed something. I’m actually more present with my work than I’ve been in years. When I’m writing, I’m writing. Not thinking about the next task in the queue. Not glancing at a timer counting down. Not mentally reviewing whether I’ve checked off enough items to feel okay about myself today.
Productivity, I’ve realized, isn’t about managing time. It’s about managing attention. And attention doesn’t respond well to being chopped into pieces and distributed across a spreadsheet. It responds to space. To simplicity. To having so few things on the list that you can actually give each one the focus it deserves.
What I’d say to the over-optimizer
If you’re reading this and you recognize yourself in it – the elaborate setup, the constant tweaking, the feeling of being busy but never quite caught up – I want to be honest with you. You probably don’t have a productivity problem. You probably have a simplicity problem.
You don’t need a better app. You don’t need a new framework or a different method for time-blocking your afternoons. You might just need a piece of paper and the willingness to write down three things.
The resistance you’ll feel to that idea – the voice that says “but my situation is more complex than that” – that’s the same voice that sold you the elaborate system in the first place. It’s not trying to help you be more productive. It’s trying to keep you comfortable in the familiar loop of preparation without execution.
I know because that voice lived in my head for years. It was very convincing. It had spreadsheets to back itself up.
But the best work I’ve ever done – the clearest thinking, the most consistent output, the projects I’m genuinely proud of – all of it happened after I stopped preparing to be productive and just started producing.
Delete the apps. Pick up a pen. Write down three things.
Then do them.