@rucha_joshi8 I recently cut out coffee so falling asleep has been slightly easier, but the waking up not so much :) Have you always been an early riser or did you work toward that?
@sav_cooper I tried cold turkey, and then the headaches hit me pretty hard. So I cut down from 4+ cups a day to just two, then one, and recently I'm down to only having coffee on the weekends when I'm with friends. I'm trying to drink herbal tea but it isn't an amazing replacement.
I saw recently that amazon has caffeine gummies that I might check out, but not sure if that's any healthier :)
4 PM to 7 PM is the time I schedule my "intellectual" tasks to be done. Though THE MOST productive time for me is the last two hours of the workday on Friday lol
@sofya_narbut Friday last two hours?! wow! I am least motivated to work then but, if there are pending tasks of the week it is easier to just do a final push
Thanks for sharing everyone. I would love to know and swap stories on how we motivate ourselves when we need to get work done but are feeling less than 💯
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@mahak You've been able to breakdown and optimise your day for different tasks. Quite helpful to plan stuff with a team as well if you are. working remotely and have flexible hours.
@rucha_joshi8 yes working remotely though both have good and bad effects. While giving you flexible hours, it also gives you a feeling of postponing things later. But scheduling things based on priorities definitely help me to be productive in the present day.
I have observed I am at my best during the early hours of the day. I prefer to wake up between 5-6 in the morning and 7 am - 11 am is when I get my most creative bursts, though not daily :)
I start at 8 am, sometimes 7, from the start time till 10 am I am most productive as I am working alone on my tasks.
So 7 am to 10 am is the time when I'm most productive, but if you ask me the time when I'm most creative then it has to be anytime post 11 pm. 😁
After sunset
I don't know, but there's some relationship with the sun going down and my dopamine level soaring high.
I can write for a longer time, research without interruption and, overall, feel a lot more productive as compared to the morning hours.
11pm - 4am.
seems extremely odd but I'm on the extreme part of morningness-eveningness normal distribution.
an important factor here is that each person should find his chronotype & his Myers & Briggs personality type to understand When & How to work in order to be productive.
I'm an INTJ & a night owl so working alone at night is my optimal way to get things done.
@rucha_joshi8 Not really, no. I try to keep to a schedule because that works best for my productivity. Of course I have to be flexible because things always come up, but I know pretty reliably that once the kids are in bed, I'll be able to get work done because they won't get up.
When I worked alone I was most productive from 8pm to 2am. These days as I work with a team I've adjusted that to be 3pm to 8pm. I'm still definitely not a morning person 😂
@vincentropy I get you. While working by ourselves we can definitely optimise for our own productivity. But have to find ways to adopt while collaborating with others. Despite that I prefer working with a team.
@rucha_joshi8 Haha coffee doesn't agree with my stomach, but I have 1 sugarless energy drink with a B vitamin complex tablet every morning and few cups of strong English breakfast tea in the afternoons to keep me going.
8-10:30 AM tends to be the sweet spot where I'm well-rested and ready to engage with analytical deep work. Nighttime tends to be the best for reflective writing/correspondence.
I like fitting the meetings in between and can brainstorm or chat then (as long as the meeting has a set agenda/purpose).
I am an evening person, being more relaxed and focused without any hurry. Working during the night, however, is not my thing. So I guess between 18-20 or so.
Tolstoy