30 Minute Visual Timer
Half an hour of focused time. Enough to move the needle on anything.
Time's up!
5 minutes, fully present. That's what winning looks like.
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Get Noro free →Why seeing time helps your brain focus
Most timers just show numbers counting down. That's fine if your brain already has a sense of how long 30 minutes is. But if you've ever looked up from your desk and realized two hours vanished, you know that internal clock isn't always reliable.
A visual timer turns time into something physical. You can see it shrinking. That constant visual feedback keeps your brain anchored to the present instead of drifting off into "I'll just do one more thing" territory. It's not about pressure - it's about awareness.
Ways to use a 30 minute timer
- Start a task you've been avoiding - just a few minutes, that's it. Most of the time you'll keep going.
- Tidy one area of your space before the timer runs out. Desk, counter, inbox - pick one.
- Take a real break between work sessions. Step away, stretch, breathe.
- Brain dump everything on your mind onto paper before it all disappears again.
- Wind down before a transition - a few minutes to mentally shift gears before the next thing.
Why 30 minutes works
This amount of time is short enough that your brain can't argue with it. "I don't have time" doesn't work when it's a manageable chunk. "I'm not in the mood" doesn't work either - anyone can commit to a single focused block.
The hardest part of any task is starting it, and a visual timer removes every excuse your brain throws at you.