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Syed Ahmer Shah
Syed Ahmer Shah

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I Went on a 90-Day Dopamine Detox as a Dev Student — Here’s What Happened

Originally Published on my Hashnode

Instagram. Music. Reels. Dopamine.

I didn’t realize how much they were draining me — until I cut them off cold turkey for 90 days.

As a software engineering student trying to level up, build side projects, trade crypto, and one day move to Germany — I had no space left for low-return distractions.

So I stopped. Cold.

No music. No Instagram. 90 days.

Here’s what I learned.


🚫 Why I Started the Dopamine Detox

I was waking up tired.

Coding felt like a chore.

And somehow, I was spending 4+ hours a day just feeding my brain dopamine through Instagram and music.

But my dream is bigger.

I want to move to Germany, become a real software engineer, build something of value, and live with intention.

So I said screw it — let’s detox.


🧱 The Rules I Set

Simple, strict, and non-negotiable:

  • ❌ No Instagram

  • ❌ No music, songs, or even lo-fi beats

  • ✅ Daily bath and grooming

  • ✅ Pray as many of the 5 daily prayers as I could

  • ✅ Use the free time to code, learn, and reflect

It wasn’t about being a monk.

It was about being in control.


💀 Week 1: The Withdrawal Phase

The first few days? Pure chaos.

My brain was screaming for stimulation.

I’d reach for my phone by muscle memory.

I even caught myself mentally scrolling through reels I had watched weeks ago.

It was uncomfortable.

I felt restless, bored, and low-key anxious.

But I kept going.

Because deep down I knew — this pain was temporary, but the gain was forever.


🧠 Week 2 to Week 4: Focus Returns

Somewhere in Week 3, the fog started to lift.

I began to:

  • Wake up with real energy

  • Code for longer, deeper stretches

  • Actually enjoy problem-solving again

  • Pray more consistently

  • Feel mentally lighter and calmer

It felt like my brain had finally rebooted.

I was using tools like Cursor AI, Copilot, and VS Code — and I was flowing like never before.

No distractions, no noise — just pure creation.


🚀 What I Gained From the Detox

The gains were WAY beyond what I expected:

  • ⏳ 4+ hours of time recovered daily

  • 🧠 Cleaner code and deeper focus

  • 💪 More self-discipline in all areas

  • 🕌 Stronger spiritual routine

  • 🧘‍♂️ Less anxiety, more internal peace

Turns out, cutting distractions isn’t about deleting apps — it’s about owning your mind.


🎯 Would I Recommend It? Absolutely.

If you're a student, a dev, a creator — try it.

Start with 7 days. Then go for 30.

You'll get uncomfortable at first, but what comes after… is clarity, calm, and control.

Your brain will thank you.

Your code will thank you.

Your future will thank you.


🙌 Final Thoughts

If you’ve ever done a dopamine detox — or if you’re planning one — drop your thoughts below.

Let’s build focus, faith, and freedom together — one line of code at a time.


📌 Let’s Connect & Collaborate

📍 Google Business Profile – Reviews & Verification

✍️ Medium – @syedahmershah

💬 Dev.to – @syedahmershah

🧠 Hashnode – @syedahmershah

💻 GitHub – @ahmershahdev

🔗 LinkedIn – Ahmer Shah
🧭 Beacons — Syed Ahmer Shah
🌐 Portfolio – Website

Thanks for reading! Let’s build something legendary 🚀

Written by Ahmer, just a dev student trying to build his best self in a noisy world.

Top comments (1)

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monkmodeapp profile image
Monk Mode Team

90 days is serious commitment! The part about social media being the hardest to cut resonates — as devs we genuinely need YouTube for tutorials and Reddit for troubleshooting, but those same sites are designed to trap you in algorithmic feeds for hours. That's exactly why I started using Monk Mode (mac.monk-mode.lifestyle) on my Mac. Instead of blocking YouTube or Reddit entirely, it removes just the feed/discovery sections — YouTube Home, Shorts, Reddit front page, X For You — while keeping search and direct links fully functional. It's been running on my machine for months now and I barely notice it except when I realize I haven't fallen into a doomscrolling hole in weeks. Would have made your 90-day challenge much more sustainable from day 1.