Working From Home Was Killing My Focus — Until I Tried This

Sarah, 34, content strategist from Amsterdam
When my company went fully remote, I was thrilled. No commute, no open office noise, no awkward kitchen conversations. I was going to be so productive. That lasted about two weeks.
What actually happened was this: I would sit at my desk, open my laptop, and within minutes my phone would appear in my hand. Not because of work. Because of nothing. I would check the weather, read a thread on X, scroll through someone's vacation photos. And then an hour would pass and I had not touched my actual work.
The Guilt Spiral
The worst part of working from home with a phone habit is the guilt. At an office, distraction feels somewhat normal. At home, you know no one is watching, and you still cannot stop. I started working late into the evening to make up for lost time. My boundaries between work and life collapsed completely.
My manager mentioned that my output had dropped. I made excuses about adjusting to remote work. But it had been eight months. The adjustment period was over. I was just distracted.
Failed Solutions
I tried putting my phone in another room. That worked for about a day before I started walking to get it. I tried website blockers on my laptop but my phone was always right there as a backup distraction device. I tried working from cafes, but then I just scrolled in public instead of in private.
Finding a Ritual
A colleague who is annoyingly productive mentioned Humanodoro during a Zoom call. She said she started every work block by placing her phone on a pad on her desk and that it completely changed her day. I thought she was exaggerating. She was not.
The First Week
I set up the pad next to my laptop. Every morning at 9 AM, I placed my phone face down on it and started my first focus session. The physical act of putting the phone down felt like clocking in. It created a boundary I never had before. There was a clear moment where work mode started.
I was shocked by how much I got done in the first 45-minute block. More than I usually accomplished in a full morning. My brain, without the constant pull of my phone, could actually engage with complex tasks.
After Two Months
I now do three to four focus blocks per day. I finish my work by 5 PM most days. I stopped working evenings entirely. My manager noticed the improvement and said my strategy work was the sharpest it had been in a year.
The streaks keep me honest. I have a 47-day streak as of today and I refuse to break it. It is a small thing but it anchors my entire work routine.
What Surprised Me
I did not realize how much mental energy my phone was consuming even when I was not actively using it. Just knowing it was there, possibly buzzing, possibly lighting up, was enough to fracture my attention. The pad removed that ambient distraction in a way I could physically feel.
My Advice
If you work from home and feel like you are underperforming despite working all day, your phone might be the invisible culprit. Give it a designated resting place during work hours. You do not need to lock it away. Just give it a spot that is not your hand. The difference is immediate.