|
February 5th, 2026 A newsletter by Anne-Laure Le Cunff
Hi friends,
January is behind us! And from what many of you have shared, that comes as a relief. At the start of the year, I wrote that I hoped 2026 would be a year of calm and creative flow. So far, 2026 is not cooperating.
I’m excited about the projects I’m working on, but I’ve also been reminded how hard it can be to protect uninterrupted time – the kind where you can focus fully and make real progress.
So this week, let’s explore why creative flow can feel so elusive and how we can create conditions that allow it to emerge more often.
Enjoy the read, and stay curious! Anne-Laure.
P.S. If you’re in the mood for a bit more inspiration, my work was recently featured in Fast Company (on our relationship to success), Big Think (on mastery), HELLO! Mag (on the benefits of reading), and Inc Magazine (on creating a personal curriculum).
|
🌀 Finding Creative Flow
Sometimes, you sit down to work on a task and suddenly it’s three hours later. You were completely absorbed: ideas connecting easily, distractions fading away. This state of creative flow doesn’t happen often, which makes it feel almost magical when it does.
On most days, doing any kind of deep work can feel like a struggle against constant interruptions and mental noise, so these rare moments of effortless concentration stand out.
Which raises an obvious question: why does getting into a state of creative flow feel effortless sometimes and impossible at others?
It’s because flow is fragile. First, it rarely emerges in environments filled with interruptions, notifications, and competing demands for attention. Creative flow requires conditions that our modern life often disrupts.
Flow also depends on a very specific kind of balance, when the challenge you’re tackling stretches your skills without being overwhelming. Tasks that are too easy tend to trigger boredom, while those that exceed our current abilities can trigger anxiety.
So creative flow depends on two conditions: undivided attention and work that stretches you without overwhelming you. And the encouraging part is that this balance can be found by following four simple principles:
• Select the right task. Choose work that feels engaging but manageable. If a project feels too large, break it into smaller parts so you can stay focused without overloading your cognitive resources.
• Prepare materials ahead of time. Gather everything you need before you begin, whether that means opening documents, organizing notes, or having water/coffee next to you. Reducing small interruptions will help protect your state of creative flow.
• Create distance from distractions. The mere sight of your phone beside you can drain cognitive resources. Silence notifications and place your phone out of reach or in another room.
• Ground your attention before starting. Research on mindfulness indicates that brief breathing practices can reduce stress and improve concentration, creating conditions that support flow. So take a slow breath and bring your awareness to the present moment.
Creative flow is less about pushing yourself to stay focused and more about learning to regulate your attention. By shaping your environment and designing tasks mindfully, you’ll give your mind space to engage more deeply.
| | Sponsored by Google AdSense You create. We'll help you earn. "I can be hands off and trust the ads being shown are making me money with Google AdSense" DIY Eule, one of Germany's largest sewing content creators.
Google AI takes the guesswork out of ad placement, saving you time and effort so you can focus on what you do best: creating content. Google AdSense gives you a simple set up and makes it the better way for you to earn from your content. | | |
Many thanks to our sponsors for supporting the Ness Labs newsletter! Want to appear here? Please email support@nesslabs.com to learn more.
🔬 Tiny experiment of the week
Ready to put these ideas into practice? Try this week’s tiny experiment to help you enter a creative flow state:
I will [take one deep breath before creative tasks] for [5 days].
Count your breath slowly to five on the inhale and five on the exhale to keep your mind from drifting. This experiment will help you transition into a mental state conducive of flow, and repeating it daily will reinforce the link between calm attention and creative effort. Want to dig deeper? Get your copy of the book.
👀 Into the mind of...
Carly Valancy, founder of TETHER and Reach Out Party, is on a mission to reimagine digital networking by building tools that help people find, grow, and nurture their network with intention and joy. She’s currently running an experiment of reaching out to one person every day for 100 days. In this exclusive interview, we talked about meaningful connections as a competitive advantage, treating your personal and professional network like a garden, and much more. Enjoy the read!
🗓️ Community events this week
If you enjoy the newsletter, you’ll love our community of curious minds conducting tiny experiments within a safe space and learning together. Here is an overview of upcoming events (full calendar):
• Turn your ideas into action. Join Gosia Fricze on Monday for a creative hour session to explore why ideas often stay stuck in our heads, what holds you back from starting, and how to move forward with clarity and momentum. • Use AI to defend your focus and create bolder work. In this interactive presentation on Tuesday, Adrian Avendano will teach you his method for treating AI as a co-partner for strategy or psychological feedback without that system slowly flattens judgment, taste, and original thinking. • Increase your luck surface area through anti-networking. Join this workshop with Carly Valancy (our interviewee of the week, currently running an experiment of reaching out to one person every day for 100 days) who will break down the secrets and semantics of anti-networking, and the structure of an unignorable cold email that makes you feel amazing. • Make progress on your project. Join Kathryn Ruge for a ‘body doubling’ coworking session to work on personal or work-related projects that you want to make progress on, covering all timezones. • Host your own workshop (anytime!). Do you have an idea for a short presentation and Q&A or a workshop you’d like to trial? Test your first iteration in the Ness Labs community and get feedback. We promote all sessions here in the newsletter.
All of these and future events are included in the price of the membership (only $49 for one year), as well as access to our courses, workshop library, and a dedicated space to track your tiny experiments.
Until next week, take care! Anne-Laure.
|