I Tried Full Monk Mode for 30 Days: It Helped. It Hurt. Here’s My Honest Take.

Quick outline:

  • What I mean by “full monk mode”
  • My rules and tools
  • A real day, hour by hour
  • Wins that surprised me
  • Where it went sideways
  • Fixes I made on the fly
  • Who should try it (and who shouldn’t)
  • My verdict and fast-start tips

So… what is “full monk mode,” really?

It’s a season of focus. No fluff. Fewer choices. You put your head down and work. I did it for 30 days in January. Then I tried a shorter, 10-day run in August. Two very different months, which told me a lot.

I went in for work reasons. Big deadlines. Client handoffs. I also just felt scattered. My brain felt like a dozen tabs, all dinging at once. You know what? I needed quiet. Implementing “monk mode” can significantly enhance productivity by fostering deep focus and minimizing distractions, so I was eager to see if the hype matched reality.

For the full day-by-day journal, numbers, and reflections from that 30-day sprint, you can skim the expanded breakdown over here.

My rules (simple, strict, human)

  • Phone in a KSafe time-lock box from 7:30 a.m. to 12 p.m., and again 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
  • Freedom app blocking social, news, and shopping sites all day.
  • Two 90-minute deep-work blocks. No meetings inside them.
  • Gym or long walk daily. Rain counts.
  • No alcohol. Simple food. Meal prep on Sunday (big pot of turkey chili, rice, chopped veggies).
  • Lights out by 10:30 p.m. No “just one more” episode.
  • Three texts allowed per day to family. That’s it.
  • Read 20 pages at night. Kindle Paperwhite only.

Was it intense? Yes. But I kept it plain and boring, which helped.

If you want to see how my approach stacks up against Hamza’s stricter version of the challenge, I road-tested his exact checklist for a month and shared every win and wobble right here.

Tools I used (and why they mattered)

  • KSafe time-lock container — It kept my phone out of my hand. I can’t “just check one thing” if it’s locked away.
  • Freedom app — Blocks sites across my MacBook and iPhone. No loopholes.
  • Forest app — I grew silly little trees while I worked. If I touched my phone, the tree died. It sounds goofy. It works.
  • Sony WH-1000XM5 headphones + brown noise playlist on Spotify — Instant quiet.
  • TimeCube timer on my desk — One click. It starts. No fiddling.
  • Notion — I used a simple board: Today / Doing / Done. Drag, done.
  • Google Calendar Focus mode — I held space for the deep blocks so people saw “busy.”

I know some folks use nothing and just “have willpower.” I’m not that person. Hardware helped.

Pro tip: if you want a ready-made template for tracking your own monk-mode sprint, check out the free planner at Monkify.

A real day looked like this

  • 6:15 a.m. — Wake, stretch, black tea, quick journal. One page. Messy is fine.
  • 7:30 a.m. — Phone in the box. Freedom on. Email closed.
  • 8:00–9:30 — Deep Work Block 1. I wrote a 12-page brand deck for a retail client.
  • 9:30–10:00 — Walk loop around the block, no podcast. Just air.
  • 10:00–11:30 — Deep Work Block 2. Built slides and voice notes for the deck.
  • 11:30–12:00 — Admin: invoices in Wave, two emails, one Slack check.
  • 12:00–12:40 — Lunch. Chili, rice, apple. Not fancy. It hits.
  • 12:40–2:00 — Gym. Light lift. Sauna four minutes. Quick shower.
  • 2:00–3:30 — Edits with XM5s on. Brown noise. I said no to a surprise “quick call.” I’m proud of that.
  • 3:30–5:00 — Project review. Uploaded deck. Left clear notes.
  • 5:00 — Phone out of the box. Two texts to my sister, one to my mom. That’s my three.
  • 7:00 — Roast veggies, salmon, seltzer. Nothing wild.
  • 9:30 — Kindle: I read Show Your Work. I took two tiny notes in the margin.
  • 10:15 — Lights out.

Not every day looked this clean, but most did.

Wins that surprised me

  • Work moved fast. I finished a 40-page brand deck in 9 days. My normal is two weeks.
  • Fewer mistakes. I stopped catching typos after sending. I caught them before.
  • Less “context switching.” That’s a fancy way to say I didn’t hop tasks. My brain felt calmer.
  • Sleep got deeper. My Garmin showed more deep sleep. And I woke up less puffy.
  • Screen time dropped by 3 hours a day. That felt… free.
  • Money saved. No late-night scrolling meant no “oh cute sweater” buys.
  • Energy. Afternoon slumps didn’t hit as hard. A walk fixed most dips.
  • I read three books: Atomic Habits, Four Thousand Weeks, and Show Your Work. I kept one idea from each.

I also shipped two newsletters and cleaned my junk drawer. Tiny, but it felt huge.

Where it went sideways

Still, I knew going in that the practice could surface feelings of isolation and the risk of burnout, so I kept an eye on my mood and energy throughout the month.

  • Loneliness. By week two, I missed casual noise. I even missed bad memes.
  • Social bumps. I skipped a friend’s trivia night. She understood, but it still stung.
  • Perfection trap. When a rule snapped, like when I answered a text at 11 a.m., I felt like I “failed.” That’s not helpful.
  • Rebound risk. On day 31, I almost binged on Reels. I caught myself, but still.
  • Summer round was harder. August is full of BBQ invites. Saying no felt rude and joyless.
  • Food got boring. Chili is great. Four days in a row? I was grumpy.

I also got a low headache the first week. Less caffeine, more water helped.

For anyone who realizes during a monk-mode sprint that they’re craving light, low-maintenance social interaction—think playful chats without the commitment of full-blown dating—this detailed Snapfuck review walks through how the hookup platform works, its safety features, and whether it’s worth reserving a sliver of your limited screen time for some no-strings digital flirting.

If what you’re itching for instead is an offline, face-to-face coffee or a low-stakes walk in the park—but you still refuse to let endless swiping torch your focus—Forest Park locals can jump into Backpage Forest Park for a concise, location-based classifieds feed that surfaces nearby same-day meetups and lets you scratch the social itch without reopening the attention-guzzling mainstream apps.

Fixes I made mid-way (so it felt human)

  • Social “office hours.” I added 30 minutes at 5:30 p.m. for voice memos with friends. It kept ties warm.
  • One flex window a week. Saturday 3–7 p.m. I said yes to people. I didn’t spiral.
  • Rule phrasing: “Guardrails, not laws.” If I slipped, I reset on the next block, not next week.
  • Finish line ritual. On day 30, I booked ramen with my sister. Small reward, big mood.
  • “Safe list” people. My partner, my mom, my editor. If they called, I picked up.
  • Food swaps. Chili two days, then sheet-pan chicken, then pasta with greens. Simple, not sad.

These tweaks saved it. I wish I had used them from day one.

Who should try it

  • You have a clear, near deadline. A thesis. A launch. A job hunt.
  • Your work needs deep thinking: writing, code, design, research.
  • You feel scattered and want a reset. Not forever. A month.

Who shouldn’t:

  • You’re a caregiver on call, or your job is urgent by nature.
  • You’re in a heavy social season: weddings, travel, holidays.
  • You’re healing from burnout. This can feel too sharp.

Curious about stretching the practice to an entire quarter? A detailed 90-day case study— complete with the exact habits, emotions, and tweaks—lives [in this deep dive](https://www.monk