A calmer way to study

Pomodoro helps you focus without trying to grind for hours.

DoroDoro breaks study time into short sessions with real pauses in between. You get a clear start point, a simple rhythm, and a better chance of staying focused until the work is done.

What is Pomodoro?
25 min Work on one task
5 min Take a short break
Repeat Build momentum without burning out
Happy Tomato - Pomodoro Technique
Start sooner A short timer makes difficult work feel easier to begin.
Stay sharper Planned breaks help you come back before your attention fades.

What is the Pomodoro technique?

A simple cycle of focused work and short breaks.

You choose one task, set a timer, work until it rings, then step away for a few minutes. After a few rounds, you take a longer break. It is a straightforward system, but it works because it gives your brain a clear structure instead of an open-ended study session.

How it can help

It makes big tasks feel smaller.

When the goal is only one short session, it is easier to begin. That matters on days when studying feels heavy or you keep putting the first step off.

What students usually notice

Less drifting and better consistency.

You spend less time bouncing between tabs or staring at a task without moving. The timer gives each session a clear boundary, which helps attention stay on the work in front of you.

How to try it

1

Pick one task

Keep it specific, like reading ten pages or finishing one problem set.

2

Work until the timer ends

Ignore everything that is not part of the current session.

3

Take the break, then repeat

Stand up, stretch, drink water, and come back ready for the next round.