Unconventional Logic

Master Your Focus With Unconventional Logic

How to use this toolkit
  • Treat these radically different hacks as a toolkit to complement — not replace — how you already organise and prioritise your day.
  • Reach for them selectively whenever you’re stuck, tired, or need a jolt of focus.
  • Pull one out for an extra boost the moment distraction or procrastination starts to creep in.

The Toolkit

Six protocols for the moments you stall.

01Protocol

Implement a “Kill List”

Stop

A to-do list that grows endlessly and suffocates your focus.

Start

Begin the day with one critical, high-impact task you finish by any means necessary.

Your Big Reward

Finish that one task and the day is an absolute victory. You’ve earned a long break to relax.

Mental Edge

Kills decision fatigue and the guilt of unfinished lists, forcing you to prioritise what matters most.

02Protocol

Bust procrastination with Micro-Bursts

Stop

Long deep-work blocks you can never make yourself start.

Start

Set a timer for 10 minutes, work with total intensity, and stop the moment it goes off.

When you’re procrastinating, the task feels too big. Shrinking it down is the whole trick.

Why It Works

Procrastination is an emotional hurdle, not a time-management one. Break the friction of starting and you’ll likely keep going.

03Protocol

The Productive Procrastination pivot

Stop

Fighting the urge to procrastinate.

Start

Weaponise it. Keep a “B-List” of low-stakes tasks — inbox zero, filing, organising.

One firm rule: absolutely no internet and no social media.

The Strategic Shift

When you need to dodge the main project, pivot here. You still get real work done — just not the high-stress kind — keeping momentum without the burnout.

04Protocol

Build an “Anti-Routine”

Stop

Rigid, perfect morning routines that just pile on pressure.

Start

Strip away everything except the bare essentials needed to start working.

Just open your laptop and begin with your Kill Task.

The Reality

You don’t need a ritual to be productive. Normalise a little chaos so your output stops depending on “perfect” conditions.

05Protocol

Master micro-deadline sprints

Stop

Open-ended two-hour work blocks.

Start

Set a timer for 17 minutes — the odd number manufactures urgency — then take 3-minute breaks between cycles.

The Psychological Edge

An odd deadline triggers a scarcity mindset. Racing a short, specific clock skips the friction of deep work and drops you into flow faster.

06Protocol

Stop ending your day by finishing things

Stop

Wrapping up a task neatly right before you log off.

Start

Quit mid-sentence, mid-slide, mid-thought — leave the loop open.

Finishing feels great in the moment — and quietly destroys tomorrow’s start.

The Zeigarnik Effect

Your brain fixates on the unfinished loop overnight, so you sit down the next morning already inside the work — not staring at a cold, blank start.

Pick one. Run it tomorrow.