How to Time-Block Like a Neuroscientist
Reading time: 4 minutes
Written for THE RESONANCE CO. by Dr Ross de Burgh, PhD in Neuroscience
Why Time Blocking Works Better When You Understand Your Brain
Most people think time blocking is about discipline: dividing your day into tidy boxes and sticking to them no matter what. A neuroscientist sees it differently.
Your brain moves through natural cycles of focus, energy, and restoration. When you align your time-blocking system with those rhythms, you work more deeply, switch tasks less often, and finish the day with energy left over.
This is neuroscience-backed time blocking — a method built not on willpower, but biology.
The Brain’s Natural Focus Cycle
Every 90 to 120 minutes, your brain enters what researchers call an ultradian cycle — a rise in focus followed by a natural dip.
This is the foundation of time blocking and ultradian rhythms.
During the high-focus phase:
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Attention is sharp
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Problem-solving is easier
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Deep work feels natural
During the low-energy phase:
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The brain wants rest, not discipline
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Switching tasks feels harder
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Mistakes increase
Traditional time blocking ignores this.
Brain-based time blocking embraces it.
The Neuroscientist’s Four-Step Method
1. Map Your Natural Peaks
Spend two or three days noticing when your mind feels clear. Track:
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When thinking feels easy
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When you get restless
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When your concentration fades
Most people find two or three strong peaks a day.
Those become your deep-work blocks.
This is the foundation of time-blocking like a neuroscientist.
2. Build 90-Minute Deep-Focus Blocks
Once you know your peaks, create two to three 90-minute blocks in your daily planner or productivity journal.
These blocks should contain only one task — the one that genuinely matters.
Why 90 minutes?
Because that’s how long your brain can sustain elevated focus before the ultradian cycle switches. After that point, productivity drops sharply.
3. Protect the Recovery Phase
The biggest mistake in time blocking is ignoring recovery.
A neuroscientist would never schedule back-to-back deep-focus sessions.
After each 90-minute block, take a 10–20 minute reset:
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Walk
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Stretch
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Make tea
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Look out a window
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Write one line in your daily mindfulness journal
These resets restore your attention system and prevent burnout.
4. Use Light Blocks Strategically
Not all time is deep-focus time.
Use your low-energy periods for:
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Emails
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Admin
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Planning
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Scheduling
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Tidying
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Messaging
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Low-stakes tasks
This is where time blocking becomes sustainable.
You are no longer forcing your brain to do deep work when it isn’t biologically designed for it.
How to Combine Time Blocking With Your Planning Routine
Morning Calibration
Look at your planned blocks and ask:
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What has the most emotional weight today?
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Which task aligns with my peak?
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What can wait?
This turns your work-life balance planner 2025 or Sustainably Productive Planner into a strategic map, not a checklist.
Midday Reset
Use one light block as a recalibration point.
If something derailed your morning, adjust the afternoon not with guilt, but with awareness.
This is how neuroscientists maintain productivity without collapsing under pressure.
Evening Shut-Down
Five minutes of reflection rewires your brain for better focus tomorrow.
Write down:
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What your brain did well
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What drained you
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One intention for the next deep-work block
This makes your time-blocking system stronger every day.
Common Mistakes (and How a Neuroscientist Avoids Them)
Mistake 1: Cramming Too Many Deep-Work Blocks
A neuroscientist rarely schedules more than three.
Productivity collapses after that.
Mistake 2: Confusing Busy With Focus
Your brain prefers depth over quantity.
A shorter block done well beats five hours of scattered attention.
Mistake 3: Ignoring Emotional State
If your mind is tense, you cannot enter deep work.
Reset first — always.
Mistake 4: Using Rigid Templates
Neuroscience-backed time blocking adapts daily.
It is responsive, not fixed.
A Neuroscientist’s Ideal Daily Layout
(Simple, flexible, biologically aligned)
Deep Block 1
Peak focus task
Light Block
Admin, email, small tasks
Deep Block 2
Second priority task
Recovery Ritual
Walk, stretch, rest
Optional Deep Block 3
Only if energy allows
Evening Reflection
Short journaling or values check-in
Why This Works
Because you are working with your brain not against it, time blocking becomes effortless, not forced.
When you practice time-blocking like a neuroscientist, you:
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Finish tasks faster
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Make fewer errors
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Experience less stress
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Preserve creativity
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End the day clearer and lighter
This is productivity that feels human.