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John
John

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I built Monk Mode because blockers kept breaking my workflow

For a while I kept trying every focus app I could find.

Most of them were built around one idea: block the whole site, block the whole app, block the whole internet.

That sounds strict. In practice it broke my workflow.

I still needed YouTube for tutorials.
I still needed X for launch research and customer hunting.
I still needed Reddit before I got banned.
What I did not need was the infinite feed that turned a five minute check into forty minutes gone.

That mismatch kept bothering me.
The distracting part was usually not the platform itself.
It was the feed, the recommendations, the endless scroll, the while you are here trap.

So I built Monk Mode for macOS around a narrower idea: remove the slot machine, keep the useful parts.

Instead of blocking an entire app or domain, Monk Mode can block the feed itself.
Open YouTube and search still works.
Open X and the addictive timeline can disappear.
You keep access to the tool without handing your attention to the algorithm.

That mattered to me because I am a solo developer.
When you work alone, context switching is expensive.
You do not lose just ten minutes to a feed.
You lose the state you were holding in your head.
Getting that state back can take longer than the distraction itself.

I also learned that heavy handed blockers create their own kind of friction.
If a tool is too strict, I start looking for ways around it.
If it is too loose, it does nothing.
The sweet spot is reducing temptation without making the computer feel hostile.

That is the product philosophy behind Monk Mode.
Less punishment.
More environment design.

I do not think focus comes from willpower alone.
A lot of it comes from whether your tools make the bad choice easy.
Most modern apps are optimized to pull you sideways.
I wanted one that pushes back a little.

That is why I built Monk Mode.
Not because the world needed another generic blocker.
Because I needed something that removed distraction at the layer where distraction actually happens.

If you are curious, it is here: https://mac.monk-mode.lifestyle

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