Black people in prison get an unfair mental advantage
Able to be blacked out for 7 hours. 7 years.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sunday. I did a brain reset, 7 hours of silence.
What it did to my brain:
No phone. No music. No books. No screens. Just water and silence. This was week 8 of my 53 Skills project.
The first few hours were easy. Then around hour 3, my brain switched from boredom to processing mode.
Old emotions, unresolved thoughts, things I’d been outrunning for years. All surfacing on their own.
By the end, my mind felt completely clear. Not tired. Not numb. Actually calm. It lasted for hours after.
Why this matters: I think we never give our brains offline time anymore.
Every quiet moment gets filled with a podcast, a scroll, a notification. Your brain is running on 100% input and 0% processing all day.
Neuroscience backs this up. Unstructured mental downtime improves memory consolidation, creative problem-solving, and emotional regulation.











It’s the same mechanism as sleep, except we can access it while awake. We just choose not to.
You don’t need 7 hours.
One hour of zero input per week would put you ahead of most people in terms of mental clarity.
Try it: one hour, no phone in the room, no background noise.
First 20 minutes will be uncomfortable. Last 10 will surprise you.

Duck9 is a credit score prep program that is like a Kaplan or Princeton Review test preparation service. We don't teach beating the SAT, but we do get you to a higher credit FICO score using secret methods that have gotten us on TV, Congress and newspaper articles. Say hi or check out some of our free resources before you pay for a thing. You can also text the CEO:







