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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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Walk home. Yeah, walk. Use your feet. This might be not the best solution in USA, but in most European cities, this is quite acceptable solution, since the distaince between work and home usually is less than 10 kilometers. Walking distance of about 3 kilometers / 2 miles will be enough to clear your mind (the rest of the road home can be done with public transit).

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Buy a house.

You'll instantly have dozens of things to take care of that don't involve any programming at all.

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Run for 30 minutes and lift weights; I recommend Slipknot for the drive home.

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Usually I'll either go for a ride (Jamis Diablo):

bike photo

or wrench on my car (87 Honda Civic Si w/ '89 Acura Integra motor swap):

alt text

alt text

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These might seem like two utterly different solutions, but let me recommend video games (particularly twitch-based first person shooters and sports games--you don't want to have to think much) and yoga.

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I like to do something physical yet still involved in the creation or destruction of something. Even during school, I worked a summer/winter/spring break construction job which involved electric, plumbing, and demolition (GLEE), etc. Get yourself a hammer and some lumber.

Also, sometimes a good way to decompress is to program for fun/yourself. Coding for work and coding for fun are two completely different mindsets. But you have to be careful not to start working on code from work and making it fun... strange things start to happen.

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There are 3 things that really help me with this problem:

  1. Excercise, excercise, excercise (For me, it's jogging in the woods...)
  2. Make a to-do list for yourself for tomorrow, or debrief yourself as AlexanderJohannesen wrote (Excellent post btw)
  3. Don't engage your thoughts

With the last one, what I mean is this: when something about programming pops into your head, simply note to yourself what you're thinking about right now; don't try to force it out of your head. Don't start to solve any problems, but make a note that you're thinking about a problem. Be a spectator to your thoughts and not a participant. Strange, but it works! ;-)

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The best is a bicycle ride home.

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I moved to Hawaii last year and work remotely. Yesterday, for example, I walked with my wife down to the end of our street, jumped into the Pacific, and swam until sunset.

THEN I had the previously recommended beer.

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Since the answers are already quite good, I'll just add a quick list of what helps me:

  1. Hot shower or bath
  2. Mindless video games
  3. Taking a walk or drive to just let my mind work through things
  4. Work out/exercise
  5. Talk to a friend or coworker
  6. Meditate (depends how worked up my mind is)
  7. Sex (when I'm so lucky)
  8. Drink (in moderation of course)

It all depends on the situation and personal preference, sadly. I wouldn't mind if there was a cure-all for an overloaded mind :-)

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Initially i used to get nightmares of the code...

but now i am playing new games, watching movies and listening to music on my iPod Touch.

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Play ice hockey, basketball, or go to the gym. A really intense workout really helps take my mind to a different place. If it's a sport, it's a lot of fun, too. And you'll feel like superman/superwoman after. Group sports give you a chance to talk to people, too, and joke around, which is rewarding in so many ways.

But don't go home first. Bring your stuff to work with you. The second you get home, it will be 100 times harder to motivate yourself to leave. Go straight from work to the gym/rink/court/whatever!

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As many other posters said, get some exercise! Even if it is just swimming laps (as many of us Arizonans do year round) or walking to the store rather than driving. Physical exertion is a great way to relieve mental exertion.

Additionally, let someone else do the thinking! Read a (preferably fiction) book, listen to some tunes, play a video game, do something to, "let the mind breathe," as my parents used to tell me.

Ultimately, do something enjoyable and not involving a computer or intense problem solving.

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Pretty much anything which requires a bare minimum of concentration will do: Bicycling (not in a city!), wood chopping, sleeping.

Equally important is to remember which activities will not work: Fast-paced games, more programming, web browsing, reading.

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Why not play mafiawars in facebook?

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Do SPORTS you geeks!

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Sitting in my car for 2 hours to get home :(

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Riding a bike home (commuting) focuses your ind on staying alive and not getting hit by a car.

I have found nothing better than that.

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Unfortunately for me, if I'm feeling down after work, I just drink until I can't feel feelings any more =[

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One thing works for sure which clears my mind off 'programming' when i am about to finish is

think of more stressing issues like 'Health care', jobs moving abroad , recession or same.

but I won't recommend

hmm a poitive approach i take is work on next date, think about next pay day. browse my badges and points in my profile at stackoverflow.com (for the last day) or anything, anything but programming.

and finally all works if your job for the day was properly done, you are satisfied with your code / progress and you feel the day was well spent.

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I find anything that gets me away from the idiot box does the job, especially anything outside. I usually hit one of the many spots in my area that is off the beaten trail and just go exploring nature wise. Or go for a drive, with no destination, and see where the road takes me. Not only are these quite relaxing, but you find some neat stuff off the beaten trail (like old cars, abandoned theaters, marooned ships, etc...)

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have you tried a FPS on the xbox or ps3? definitely helps clear the mind of daily "what-if's"

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Talk to your best friend.Thats what I do.

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I love cooking.And being an Indian its enough to keep you busy and refresh your mind while cooking the Indian food.

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Do something physical, which requires focus, but no analytical thinking. Two examples that work for me: cooking, and boxing (Muay Thai, to be precise...). When an issue is on my mind, it's hard for me to let go, even when I want to. Chopping onions, or doing a routine, are a great way to fool your brain and force it to focus on something else, using a different set of neurons. Find the one that works for you!

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Find the loooooongest way to get home from the office, and ride your motorbike thow it ;)

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I run. It doesn't matter how excited, angry, or [insert other emotional state] I am, running for an hour or more has a way of clearing my mind and let's me focus on what really matters.

And I don't just run at a leisurely pace, I run with intent. I run hard enough for the given amount of time that I collapse on the couch. After maybe 10 minutes of running hard, my brain seems to limit what I am able to concentrate on: my breathing, my footsteps, and the most important thing on my mind currently. I have enough focus to enjoy every deep breath, every footstep, and the clarity to think through my most important thought.

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Go do some strenuous exercise. Then wolf down a pound of pasta an drink some water. Then read some non-sci-fi until you go to sleep.

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