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How I Stay Sane While Shipping Daily

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My 'Sustainable Solo' Schedule: How I Protect My Energy (and Sanity) While Shipping Every Day

Honestly, there was a point a few months back where I felt like I was drowning. Building my 52-product challenge, shipping daily updates, and trying to keep everything afloat as a solo founder was taking a serious toll. I was pulling late nights, fueled by caffeine, and the dreaded burnout was creeping in like a dark cloud.

A person looking exhausted at a computer screen late at night

The all-or-nothing mentality I’d adopted was unsustainable. I thought the only way to succeed was to work myself into the ground.

But that’s a fast track to nowhere good, especially when you’re doing this all by yourself. I realized something had to change, and fast, if I wanted to keep building and shipping without completely losing my mind.

This is where the idea of a "Sustainable Solo Schedule" was born. It’s not about working less; it’s about working smarter and, more importantly, protecting my most valuable asset: my energy.

The 'Sustainable Solo Schedule' Framework

My approach is built around a few core principles: deep work blocks, intentional breaks, recovery activities, and realistic daily shipping goals. It’s an iterative process, and I’m constantly tweaking it, but this is what’s been working for me.

1. Deep Work Blocks (The Core)

I schedule 2-3 blocks of 90 minutes each for focused, uninterrupted work. This is where the actual building, coding, and problem-solving happens.

I turn off notifications, close unnecessary tabs, and really dive deep into a specific task. No context switching allowed.

2. Intentional Breaks (The Recharge)

After each deep work block, I take a 15-20 minute break. This isn't just scrolling social media.

I try to move my body, grab some water, or just step away from the screen entirely. It prevents mental fatigue and helps me come back refreshed.

3. 'Recovery' Activities (The Sanity Savers)

These are non-negotiable activities that help me recover and prevent burnout. For me, this includes:

  • Morning Walk: A 30-minute walk before I even touch my computer. It clears my head and sets a positive tone.
  • Exercise: A quick 30-minute workout session, usually in the late afternoon.
  • Mindful Evenings: No work after 8 PM. I try to read, spend time with family, or just relax.

4. Realistic Daily Shipping Goals

This is crucial. Instead of aiming for massive feature releases every day, I focus on smaller, achievable shipping goals.

This could be a bug fix, a small UI improvement, or even just a documentation update. It keeps the momentum going without the pressure of a huge deliverable.

A diagram showing a daily schedule with blocks for deep work, breaks, and recovery activities

Putting It Into Practice

Let’s look at a typical day:

  • 7:00 AM (7:30 AM: Morning Walk & Hydration
  • 7:30 AM) 8:00 AM: Quick review of tasks for the day, planning.
  • 8:00 AM (9:30 AM: Deep Work Block 1 (e.g., coding a new feature)
  • 9:30 AM) 9:50 AM: Break (stretch, grab coffee)
  • 9:50 AM (11:20 AM: Deep Work Block 2 (e.g., responding to customer feedback, refining a feature)
  • 11:20 AM) 11:40 AM: Break (quick walk around the house)
  • 11:40 AM (12:30 PM: Admin & Communication (emails, social media posting, quick customer support)
  • 12:30 PM) 1:30 PM: Lunch Break (completely away from the desk)
  • 1:30 PM (2:00 PM: Exercise
  • 2:00 PM) 3:30 PM: Deep Work Block 3 (e.g., writing blog posts, planning next steps)
  • 3:30 PM (3:50 PM: Break
  • 3:50 PM) 4:30 PM: Wrap-up, plan for tomorrow, and ship any small updates.

This structure isn't rigid. Some days, Deep Work Block 3 might be replaced by customer calls or market research. The key is the intention behind each block and the commitment to the recovery activities.

A graphic illustrating actionable steps for solo founders to create their own sustainable schedule

Your Takeaway: Design Your Own Sustainable Solo Rhythm

If you're a solo founder feeling the burnout creep in, try this:

  1. Identify Your Energy Drains: What activities leave you feeling depleted? What activities recharge you?
  2. Schedule Deep Work: Block out focused time for your most important tasks. Protect this time fiercely.
  3. Build in Breaks: Don't just power through. Short, intentional breaks are essential for sustained productivity.
  4. Prioritize Recovery: Non-negotiable activities like exercise, walks, or even just quiet time are vital for your long-term sanity and success.
  5. Set Realistic Shipping Goals: Focus on consistent progress, not heroic, unsustainable efforts.

Creating a sustainable schedule is an ongoing experiment. It’s about finding a rhythm that allows you to build amazing things without sacrificing your well-being. You've got this.

Hien Phan

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How I Stay Sane While Shipping Daily | Hien Phan - Solo Developer Building 52 Products in 365 Days