



Core mechanic of the Flowtime Technique where break duration is calculated as approximately 20% of the preceding work session, creating flexible rest periods that scale naturally with work intensity and duration.
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The Proportional Break System is a defining feature of the Flowtime Technique, where break duration is calculated as approximately one-fifth (20%) of the work session that preceded it. This creates a natural scaling where longer work sessions receive longer breaks.
Basic Calculation: Break Time = Work Session × 0.2 (or 20%)
Examples:
The 20% ratio:
During Work:
During Breaks: 4. Calculate 20% of work duration 5. Take a break for that calculated time 6. Use break for genuine rest, not shallow work 7. Return refreshed for next session
Pomodoro (Fixed 25/5):
Flowtime (Proportional 20%):
Research on ultradian rhythms shows:
For Different Work Types:
Creative Work: May sustain 90-120 minutes → 18-24 minute breaks
Analytical Tasks: Often 45-60 minutes → 9-12 minute breaks
Routine Work: Might be 30-45 minutes → 6-9 minute breaks
Quality of Breaks:
Initial Period:
Long-Term:
Morning Sessions: Often longer (higher energy)
Afternoon Sessions: Typically shorter (natural dip)
High-Stakes Work: May need higher percentage (25%) for recovery
Flow-Prone Tasks: Can sustain longer sessions with standard 20%
With Pomodoro: Use Flowtime when deep in flow, Pomodoro for routine tasks
With Time Blocking: Allocate blocks but use Flowtime within them
With GTD: Apply Flowtime to "Do" phase execution
The Proportional Break System represents a more nuanced approach to rest and recovery than fixed-interval methods, recognizing that different work demands require different recovery periods.