19 comments

  • apothegm a day ago

    Try consuming less caffeine, regardless of source. The jitters are from too much. So are the crashes. And you’ve probably built up a tolerance to the focus-inducing effects.

    You may have a tough time the first week or two after weaning down, but you’ll feel much better afterward. Probably get better quality sleep too, and be naturally more focused when awake.

  • mikert89 an hour ago

    healthy Keto diet is far more effective than anything else, also short bursts of intense cardio throughout the day

  • t0md4n a day ago

    400mg L-theanine with my coffee/caffeine throughout the day. However, I am trying to cut back to 50mg caffeine 100mg L-theanine.

  • fogzen 2 hours ago

    Focus on your breathing.

    You also need an environment conducive to focus. Be sure you’re well rested, have some fresh air, and play some calming music. Taking drugs like stimulants (coffee, tea, etc.) will interfere with this. If you want to sip on something use non-caffeinated teas. I like “yoga” blends, which are the same spices used in chai but without black tea.

  • eXpl0it3r a day ago

    Is the problem coffee or caffeine?

    I'm not the best at this either, but enough sleep really does wonders to focus.

    What also helps me with focus is the pomodoro technique in some form, basically setting myself a timer, within which I want to fully focus, no distractions, followed by a short break.

    • jaemo a day ago

      Fair point—sleep and time-blocking are probably the highest-leverage interventions. I've been using pomodoro on and off but find I still need something to get into the focused state, especially on days when sleep wasn't great.

      The caffeine question is interesting. For me it's less about needing stimulation and more about managing the side effects of what I'm already using (coffee). If I could get the alertness without the jitters/anxiety, that'd be the win. But you're right that fixing the root cause (sleep, focus discipline) is probably more sustainable long-term.

      Curious—do you avoid caffeine entirely, or just use it strategically?

      • eXpl0it3r a day ago

        I don't like the taste of coffee, but consume probably an unhealthy amount of caffeine through other means.

        My question was mostly if the coffee itself is the cause of the side effects, you could still consider other ways to consume caffeine, assuming it's the caffeine that provides the alertness to being with.

      • Webstir a day ago

        Weed. It's natures perfect combination.

  • ferguess_k a day ago

    I wish there were a magic pill that gives me a block of 3 hours of focus every day.

    Hint: this pill is "money".

  • ryanmerket 14 hours ago

    Lions man + cordyceps combo

  • gethly 10 hours ago

    Exercise

  • ksymph a day ago

    I get really terrible jitters and anxiety from coffee, and to a lesser extent tea; yerba mate on the other hand gives me the focus other people describe as getting from coffee. It's in the holly family, and has a pretty different chemical profile.

    There's a traditional preparation that involves a special type of mug and filtered straw, but steeping the yerba like tea works fine too. Playadito is a good brand. Anecdotally I find there's a lot of variation between brands in terms of effect/concentration so it's worth trying a few.

  • mkbkn 14 hours ago

    Try consuming digital content less, especially videos or audios (non-music).

    Reset your brain through digital detox, going for long walks without phone, etc. Brain has to wired again for focus. It will take time.

    If you want to read something, print it and then read.

    What ultimately shoot up my productivity was to read chapter 1 of the book - The Ultimate Sales Machine by Chet Holmes.

  • EdNutting a day ago

    Water.

    Not being flippant.

  • billy99k a day ago

    After being addicted to Caffeine for a decade, I quit it completely. I've been mostly caffeine free for a year. My issue is that I would get anxiety.

    I actually wish I would have discovered my intolerance earlier in life, because I used to drink 2-litres of Mt. Dew / day in high school and always had issues with anxiety.

    I have found that sleep+water+exercise is all I need to stay focused.

    • uncircle a day ago

      Please, how long does the lack of motivation and anhedonia last? I have been trying to quit during a particularly stressful time in my life, works great for anxiety, but after 5 days I couldn’t spare to stare at the wall any longer instead of being a productive member of society.

      This week I am drinking only one cup of tea in the morning and I’m still not very productive, but I would like to quit caffeine for good.

      (FWIW I used to only drink a double espresso in the morning and no more, but I am a very sensitive, and anxious, person)

      • billy99k a day ago

        It took me about two weeks for it to completely get out of my system. I quit cold turkey, and I had body pains and trouble focusing for the first week.

        You want to just drink it again, but if you push through, it starts getting better, until you don't feel the need to drink it again.