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Related Question- Ways to prepare your mind before coding?.

I'm having a hard time taking my mind off of work projects in my personal time. It's not that I have a stressful job or tight deadlines; I love my job. I find that after spending the whole day writing code & trying to solve problems, I have an extremely hard time getting it out of my mind. I'm constantly thinking about the current project/problem/task all the time. It's keeping me from relaxing, and in the long run it just builds stress.

Personal projects help to some extent, but mostly just to distract me. I still have source code bouncing around my head 16 hours a day.

I'm still relatively new to the workforce. Have you struggled with this, perhaps as a young developer? How did you overcome it? Can anyone offer general advice on winding down after a long programming session?

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I suspect some people are going to mark this down (might want to make it community wiki), but personally I think it's a good question and is certainly related to programming. – Bayard Randel Apr 24 at 4:07
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I down voted since I can't see how this is realated to programming other than the fact that Bryan's job is that of a developer – Sung Meister Apr 24 at 4:26
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I know the question is not specifically programming related, but it seems common enough for developers to be relevant on SO. – Bryan Apr 24 at 5:14
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Programming is a bit more than banging out code. If you see it like factory work, so be it. To a lot of people it's creative and requires managing that side of it. – Jas Panesar Apr 24 at 6:19
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As many SO'ers would say: "I wish I could upvote this more than once!" Thanks a lot for asking this --- it's a problem I've been struggling with for a long time. Somehow, programming specifically tends to bounce around in my head, too. I hadn't realized other programmers would have the same issue, or feel the same way about it... – onnodb Apr 24 at 6:47
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118 Answers

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Try a couple of these just up to the point you can't think of programming anymore


Image source: http://futureblog.designhotels.com/2008/08/

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That's about 12 for me... not a good way to prepare for the morning. :) – Darren Clark Apr 24 at 7:59
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There's a place where those beers might just help your coding! stackoverflow.com/questions/84556/… – Jarrod Dixon Apr 25 at 6:11
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Watchin Scrubs and Family Guy!

...and Poker, Alcohol and Women

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Personally...

I prefer long(ish) commute. I used to drive 45 minutes to work, now I take a ferry back and forth. I could take the train that takes 20 minutes, but I'd rather sit in a boat for 45 minutes and unwind.

I think the key point in all the responses is that you need some sort of break between work and home. If it's 30 minutes in a car, that works. 30 minutes on a boat, that works. Get frantically home then do something (like exercise) for a bit, that works.

There does need to be a break of some sort I think.

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A well known problem and I don't think this question is misplaced here. If you can not switch off after work, you won't sleep that good, which affects the work next day!

At my initial time I hardly could sleep when I had to solve a tricky problem during work, especially if I already have a solution in mind, but couldn't try it out yet. Than I keep the solution in mind and search for improvements, because I don't know yet if it really works.

But since then I calmed down a bit. Mostly I work a bit longer until I tried it out, but if it does not work I need some distraction. Most effective are making sport outdoor, or just use the cross-trainer with a running TV, cooking, baking and the rest makes my fiancée :)

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I've had similar experiences from time to time, depending on the nature of the projects I've been working on. A few things I've found help:

  • Many of your habits were likely formed while a student. Remind yourself that you're at a computer 8 hours a day now, so some of them can go, e.g.:

    When you get home, don't check your emails. Or use the damn computer. No one will have sent anything that important in the time it took you to get home. You probably had your personal email open at work all day.

    Learn the art of the of the 7-10 minute nap. After a hard day, just make sure to spend ~7-20 minutes in a decompression routine you figure out over time.

    I used to live in a flat with a band practice room in it that someone would be using when I got in. That's the opposite of what you want.

  • If you have trouble leaving before 5:30 or so, take a cue from the business analysts (or various non-developers) and just leave on time. It's too easy to get caught up in the 'just fix a few more problems' state, particularly when there's a group of devs in that state and no one wants to be seen to be the first to leave. Sure, do your work, but set yourself some rules about when it stops.

    Typically it'll take until most people's next 2-week holiday (usually the new year period) to re-resolve to do this.

  • Good old fashioned beer. Not a lot of it, just one or two. Make sure to have a few with your co-workers, particularly non-devs. If it isn't happening, instigate a few work beers once a month on Wednesday or so, or around milestones.

    I'm not saying this as a silly ode to drunken chatter, it's just that it's been an incredibly valuable tool for getting out of the incredibly focused mindset of the problems you're coding/debugging tend to leave you in. Sure, you're likely doing great work, but there's a bigger picture, and this is a time-tested, simple way to remember this.

    (Usual caveats apply on this one)

  • What everyone's getting at with the sports / hobby / girlfriend thing is simply to find stuff to get you out of your head. You spend all day inside the thing, and your body's happy to leave you there - and that's the source of your woes.

    Find something that exerts / exhausts you, is creative / abstract, or otherwise deals with the world around you. Which is why I'd suggest avoiding reading - at least for the purpose of your goal you've stated.

    Of course, the girlfriend part will occasionally leave you with bigger logic gaps to comprehend than the code you're worried about, but...

Anyway, enough from me.

Hope this helps.

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Swimming...

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Well, relaxing is hard when you have excess of responsibilities...I do envy those that can live well with that...

In my case, I try to do sports (running, swimming) and then relax by cooking and listening to music (and, of course, enjoying lots of TV shows)

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Go kitesurfing. There's nothing better than an awesome sunset kite-session after work.

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Walk from work to home, go to a gym, spend time with family, or devote a bit of time to your hobby (of course if you have one except programming :P)

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Running, outside specifically... you cannot afford to run outside and not be aware of your surroundings (especially in the city).

I've yet been able to find a cure for dreaming about a challenging problem though....

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Only two things can really get you mind of the code:

  1. Working out
  2. Liquor

Practice both regularly, and you will be GRAND!

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Preferably in that order, unless hillarious things might occur ;) – kigurai Apr 24 at 13:09
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I've once had a boss who was very tolerant to us, the IT guys. A former sysadmin himself, he even made a rule for us. No work during the last hour of the day, only emergencies. We were spending that hour shooting each other in Quake 1. Our kind boss wasn't even disturbed by our wild screams, because he was doing it with us :) I don't claim this is a panacea for everybody, but it worked for us. We were always leaving the office very fresh, with a clear mind and in a good mood. A dose of adrenaline makes wonders, you know...

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Sex... See, you stopped thinking about work already

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lol, .......... – hasen j Apr 26 at 1:57
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I also struggle with this problem almost every day. Here are some of my recommendations how to win this fight :)

1) Do some sports, e.g. climbing is extraordinary good, because when you climb, you have to be fully concentrated on the path and don't have time/opportunity to think of the job. I also cycle to/from work, go to the mountains, swimm, make long distance running etc.

2) Find some friends who are not IT freaks. Talk with them about "normal" problems like broken car, children etc

3) Find a girlfriend/get married (except your girlfriend/wife is the same kind of freak as you are, that wouldn't help)

4) Have children/buy a pet

5) Buy a non-IT magazine, read a book, go to the movies/theater.

6) Go for a drink with couple of friend - I strongly recommend it at least twice in a month.

Good luck :)

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Find interesting stuff that's not computer related. For me, that is music, working out, gardening, etc.

Things that are very unvirtual, I guess.

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Meditation has really helped me in all areas of personal and professional life. It's all about focusing on something very cyclic and routine, such as the air touching the tips of your nostrils when breathing in and out. You practice "mindfulness", which is really another way of saying "distancing yourself from your anger, fear, frustration, happiness, sadness, ecstacy, and etc". You don't have to try to achieve all the spiritual aspects of meditation that are sought in Buddhism (such as ego loss); it can be simply a way to relax. Try this book out: Mindfulness in Plain English

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Spinning poi, staff :) It's not quite martial arts but it's good to just let your muscles talk to each other and let your mind drift for a while.

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go out into the world like sit down on the grass and just do nothing and look around it does wonder's. i personally love going to the beach especially ones that are empty so you can only hear yourself thinking the wind and the water.

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A blend of physical and mental activity is generally perfect.

You cannot think about work because you are required to think about something else. The physical activity will also help you relax and cool.

Suggestion : motorbike riding!

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All of the good answers have a pretty common theme: diversify!

For me it's play guitar - I make it up as I play. That helps because it uses a different part of my brain to programmed. I don't know what your hobbies are, but try doing something completely opposite to your day-to-day job. A diverse mental portfolio has the same strength as a diverse stock portfolio, and leaves your options open should you ever become sick of being a programmer.

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Not directly to get your mind completely off of it, but for me it has helped a lot to have pretty steady working hours and a stationary computer at work. I.e. not a laptop that you bring with you home that lay somewhere screaming for attention:

Use me! You know you want to! You could get so much done if you just pick me up and work a little! You know that thing you are thinking about right now, come try see if it works!!

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Take a class of some kind. I am 23 in my senior year and working full time. On the days I don't have class I find myself engaging the problem you described. Attending class really takes my mind somewhere else. I'll come into work the next day without having given a second thought to what I was working on for 15 hours.

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Join a local rock climbing gym. It will be the most fun and best way to stay in shape. You have to focus on what you are doing. It's easy to let your mind think only about the next hold and the next movement up the wall.

Of course that brings a new problem: How to wind down at night after climbing...

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it's easy to wind-down after rock climbing - you're too exhausted not to :) – warren Sep 12 at 6:56
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I punch people in the face. Seriously that is the absolute best way to clear my mind. If anyone wants to join me visit http://www.fighthouse.com/muaythai.html

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Applied tai chi chu'an . As earlier comments indicated: physical exercise, having to keep your mind on where you're moving various body parts, dealing with people punching or kicking at you, or simply keeping your balance -- they all have a tendency to push out other concerns.

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try yoga. It will relax you and refresh your mind so that it is ready for writing more code.

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Weight training / Body building... well more weight training then body building. I'm not willing to put forth the effort to do true body building.

I started 3 years ago not being able to bench press 100 pounds. Today I weigh 168 and I can bench press 225 on a good day and 205 any day. I used bench press as an example because it's the most common measure. I feel incredible and it helps to clear my mind.

I would like to know if there are other developer that like to do weight training.

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Haven't done it in a long time, but when I did, it felt great. Any form of exercise is good for the body and helps clear the mind. – BacMan May 27 at 19:32
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Find a hobby. For me researching my family roots (genealogy) worked excellent because it could be done in front of a PC ! www.Geni.com Doing exercise is another way of get your head off the job. Hope you get the "cure" ;)

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Fishing generally does it for me.

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  • Get a religion
  • Look for a purpose in your life
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