Overview
Scheduled Blocking is a productivity technique that automates distraction prevention by blocking specific websites and apps according to a predetermined schedule, removing the need for constant willpower and decision-making.
How It Works
Users create a schedule specifying:
- What to block: List of distracting websites, apps, or categories
- When to block: Specific times and days for blocking
- Duration: How long blocks should last
- Exceptions: Any allowed sites during blocked periods
The system then automatically enforces these rules without manual activation.
Key Principles
Automation Over Willpower
By automating blocking decisions, you remove the moment-of-temptation choice, making it easier to maintain focus.
Predictable Boundaries
Knowing blocks will activate at specific times helps you mentally prepare for focused work and creates structure.
Schedule Alignment
Blocking periods align with your work schedule, energy peaks, or planned focus sessions.
Common Blocking Schedules
Workday Schedule
- 9am-12pm: Block all social media and entertainment
- 1pm-3pm: Block entertainment, allow communication
- 3pm-5pm: Block social media only
Deep Work Schedule
- Morning (8-11am): Block everything except work tools
- Afternoon (2-4pm): Block social media and news
- Evening: Unrestricted
Study Schedule
- Study hours (7-9pm): Block social media, games, streaming
- Break times: 15-minute unrestricted periods
- Late night (10pm+): Block stimulating content
- Browser extensions (Freedom, Cold Turkey, TimeBlock)
- Operating system controls (Screen Time, parental controls)
- Router-level blocking for household schedules
- App-specific blocking tools
Benefits
- Reduced decision fatigue: No constant choices about accessing sites
- Consistent productivity: Automatic enforcement every day
- Better habits: Regular blocking creates new behavioral patterns
- Peace of mind: Knowing distractions are blocked allows deeper focus
- Time awareness: Scheduled blocks make you conscious of time passing
Best Practices
- Start with narrow blocks: Don't block everything at once
- Align with energy peaks: Schedule blocks during your best focus times
- Include buffer time: Block slightly before/after planned focus periods
- Review and adjust: Refine schedules based on what works
- Communicate schedules: Let others know when you're in blocked focus time
- Build gradually: Add more blocked time as you adapt
Common Mistakes
- Blocking too many sites initially, leading to frustration
- Not leaving any unrestricted time for legitimate browsing
- Setting unrealistic schedules that don't match actual work patterns
- Frequently overriding blocks, which defeats the purpose
- Not adjusting schedules as needs change
Advanced Techniques
- Progressive blocking: Start with 1-hour blocks, gradually increase
- Category-based: Block categories (social, news, entertainment) vs individual sites
- Whitelist mode: Block all except specifically allowed work sites
- Weekend variation: Different schedules for weekends vs weekdays
- Project-specific: Unique blocking rules for different types of work