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Post Made Community Wiki by eyelidlessness
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edited Oct 6 '08 at 23:02
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You should be, first and foremost, physically active. Every day. For at least a half an hour, but an hour or more is better. Bonus points if part of this physical activity occurs while you work, or during breaks.
Drink a lot of water, eat healthy food (including vegetables; balance protein and carbohydrates, tie the amount of those to the amount of physical activity you have in your day).
Take breaks regularly. If you feel that doing so is going to attract undue attention, perhaps you should consider finding a new employer. Or make the case for the breaks by explaining that they help you keep energy and focus.
Sleep enough, and at consistent times.
Try not to spend too much free time at the computer. Besides the fact that it extends your workday stress, the light from a computer screen can negatively impact your sleep cycle and how much rest you get while sleeping.
Read a book before bed.
Spend some time (at least fifteen minutes) in the morning either meditating or sitting still without much distraction.
Edit: Also, some problems that require a lot of thought can be tackled with minor "distraction" (for example, when I need to work around a complex problem, I'll often play a level of Tetris after writing a few [up to maybe a dozen] lines of code); this is not a break: I am taking my focus away from the particularities so that my brain can focus on the more general parts of the problem and correct approaches to addressing it.
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answered Oct 6 '08 at 22:57
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You should be, first and foremost, physically active. Every day. For at least a half an hour, but an hour or more is better. Bonus points if part of this physical activity occurs while you work, or during breaks.
Drink a lot of water, eat healthy food (including vegetables; balance protein and carbohydrates, tie the amount of those to the amount of physical activity you have in your day).
Take breaks regularly. If you feel that doing so is going to attract undue attention, perhaps you should consider finding a new employer. Or make the case for the breaks by explaining that they help you keep energy and focus.
Sleep enough, and at consistent times.
Try not to spend too much free time at the computer. Besides the fact that it extends your workday stress, the light from a computer screen can negatively impact your sleep cycle and how much rest you get while sleeping.
Read a book before bed.
Spend some time (at least fifteen minutes) in the morning either meditating or sitting still without much distraction.
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