time-blocking-scheduler
GitHub为自由职业者和创意专业人士提供时间管理教练,设计深度工作日程和能量对齐的日常安排。通过划分不同功能的时间块(如深度工作、缓冲),帮助用户保护专注力,从被动反应转向主动规划,实现可持续的高效工作节奏。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add cosmicstack-labs/mercury-agent-skills --skill time-blocking-scheduler -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "time-blocking-scheduler",
"metadata": {
"tags": [
"time-management",
"productivity",
"deep-work",
"scheduling",
"routines",
"focus"
],
"author": "cosmicstack-labs",
"version": "1.0.0",
"category": "creative-personal-development"
},
"description": "A structured time management coach that designs deep work schedules, energy-aligned routines, and priority-focused blocks for freelancers, solopreneurs, and creative professionals who need to protect their focus from the chaos of unstructured days."
}
Time Blocking & Scheduling Assistant
What It Does
Designs a personalized time management system that aligns your energy patterns, priorities, and obligations into focused blocks. Instead of running on reactive mode (email → Slack → urgent request → oh look it's 5 PM), you get a repeatable daily structure optimized for deep work, creative flow, and sustainable energy.
Core Concepts
The Time Blocking Spectrum
Free-form Time-blocked Time-boxed
(no structure) (planned hours) (hard constraints)
│ │ │
│ Reactive │ Intentional │ Rigid
│ Chaotic │ Flexible │ Brittle
└───────────────────┴────────────────────┘
Target: Time-blocked (with guardrails). Enough structure to protect focus, enough flexibility to handle reality.
Block Types
| Block | Duration | Purpose | Energy Level | Interruptions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deep Work | 90-120 min | Creative, strategic, writing, coding, design | High | None (airplane mode) |
| Light Work | 30-60 min | Email, Slack, admin, scheduling | Low | Permitted |
| Meeting/Connect | 25-50 min | Calls, 1:1s, client meetings | Medium | Expected |
| Recharge | 15-30 min | Walk, stretch, meditate, nap | Restore | None |
| Buffer | 15-30 min | Transition, overflow, unexpected tasks | Any | Welcome |
| Batching | 60-120 min | Similar tasks grouped (e.g., all content creation) | Medium-High | Minimized |
Framework: Energy-Aligned Weekly Design
Step 1: Map Your Energy Patterns
Rate your energy (1-10) across the day:
Hour | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat | Sun
--------|-----|-----|-----|-----|-----|-----|-----
6 AM | 3 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 5 | 5
7 AM | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 7 | 7
8 AM | 7 | 7 | 7 | 7 | 7 | 8 | 8
9 AM | 8 | 8 | 8 | 8 | 8 | 9 | 9
10 AM | 9 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 9
11 AM | 8 | 8 | 8 | 8 | 8 | 8 | 8
12 PM | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 7
1 PM | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 5 | 6
2 PM | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 6 | 6
3 PM | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 7 | 7
4 PM | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 6 | 6
5 PM | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 5 | 5
6 PM | 3 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 4 | 4
Pattern to look for: When do you consistently have high energy? Those are your deep work slots. Protect them ruthlessly.
Step 2: Define Role Blocks
Freelancers and solopreneurs wear many hats. Label them:
| Role | Activities | Hours/Week (Goal) |
|---|---|---|
| Maker | Creative work, writing, coding, designing | 20-25 |
| Manager | Planning, strategy, finances | 3-5 |
| Seller | Sales calls, proposals, outreach | 3-5 |
| Marketer | Content, social media, email | 3-5 |
| Learner | Reading, courses, skill-building | 2-4 |
| Admin | Email, scheduling, bookkeeping | 2-3 |
| Recharge | Exercise, rest, social | 5-10 |
Step 3: Build the Template Week
MON TUE WED THU FRI
8-10 AM │ DEEP │ DEEP │ DEEP │ DEEP │ DEEP │
10-12 │ DEEP │ DEEP │ SELL │ DEEP │ LEARN │
12-1 │ LUNCH │ LUNCH │ LUNCH │ LUNCH │ LUNCH │
1-2 │ BUFFER │ ADMIN │ BUFFER │ ADMIN │ BUFFER │
2-3 │ MEETINGS │ MEETINGS │ MEETINGS │ MEETINGS │ ADMIN │
3-4 │ MEETINGS │ MEETINGS │ MARKET │ MEETINGS │ MARKET │
4-5 │ ADMIN │ MARKET │ MARKET │ ADMIN │ REVIEW │
5-6 │ RECHARGE │ RECHARGE │ RECHARGE │ RECHARGE │ RECHARGE │
Step 4: Apply the Day Design Rules
Morning: Deep work first. No email, no Slack, no social media before 12 PM.
Afternoon: Meetings, admin, light work after lunch (when energy dips anyway).
Buffer blocks: Schedule 2-3 buffer blocks per week for overflow. When something urgent comes up, it goes in the buffer, not your deep work time.
Recharge: Non-negotiable. A 20-minute walk at 4 PM preserves the 6-9 PM window.
Scheduling Patterns
Pattern 1: The Maker Schedule
Best for: Creatives, writers, developers, designers
| Time | Block | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 6-7 AM | Morning routine | Exercise, breakfast, planning |
| 7-8 AM | Admin blast | Process email, queue responses |
| 8-11 AM | Deep Work Block 1 | 3 hours, NO interruptions |
| 11-12 PM | Light Work | Emails, quick tasks |
| 12-1 PM | Lunch + Walk | No screens |
| 1-3 PM | Deep Work Block 2 | 2 hours (lower energy) |
| 3-4 PM | Meetings / Calls | Batch all calls here |
| 4-5 PM | Admin / Planning | Tomorrow prep |
| 5-6 PM | Recharge | Walk, read, cook |
Pattern 2: The Manager Schedule
Best for: Coaches, consultants, client-heavy roles
| Time | Block | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 7-8 AM | Morning planning | Review day, set intentions |
| 8-10 AM | Deep Work | Strategy, proposals, content |
| 10-12 PM | Client calls | Batch all calls |
| 12-1 PM | Lunch | |
| 1-3 PM | Client calls / Outreach | Second call block |
| 3-4 PM | Admin + Email | Process everything |
| 4-5 PM | Planning | Next day prep |
| 5-6 PM | Close | Review, journal, disconnect |
Pattern 3: The Hybrid (Most Common for Solopreneurs)
Best for: Anyone doing both creative work AND client work
┌─────────┬──────────┬──────────┬──────────┬──────────┬──────────┐
│ │ MON │ TUE │ WED │ THU │ FRI │
├─────────┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
│ 8-10 │ DEEP │ DEEP │ DEEP │ DEEP │ DEEP │
│ 10-12 │ DEEP │ DEEP │ CLIENTS │ DEEP │ LEARNING │
│ 12-1 │ LUNCH │ LUNCH │ LUNCH │ LUNCH │ LUNCH │
│ 1-2 │ ADMIN │ ADMIN │ ADMIN │ ADMIN │ ADMIN │
│ 2-3 │ CLIENTS │ CLIENTS │ CLIENTS │ CLIENTS │ PLANNING │
│ 3-4 │ CLIENTS │ MARKET │ CLIENTS │ MARKET │ PLANNING │
│ 4-5 │ ADMIN │ ADMIN │ ADMIN │ ADMIN │ REVIEW │
│ 5-6 │ RECHARGE │ RECHARGE │ RECHARGE │ RECHARGE │ RECHARGE │
└─────────┴──────────┴──────────┴──────────┴──────────┴──────────┘
Trigger Phrases
| Phrase | Action |
|---|---|
| "Design my schedule..." | Full weekly time block design based on energy + roles |
| "Plan my day..." | Creates a daily schedule for today |
| "Help me time-block..." | Guides through the framework |
| "I'm overwhelmed..." | Audit current schedule, identify time leaks |
| "Protect my focus..." | Designs distraction-proof deep work blocks |
| "Where is my time going?" | Time audit — analyze where the week went |
| "Optimize my morning..." | Focus on the first 3 hours of the day |
| "I have a deadline..." | Reverse-plans the blocks needed to hit it |
Step-by-Step Instructions
Step 1: Diagnose the Current State
Ask:
- What does your typical day look like right now?
- When do you feel most focused?
- When do you feel most distracted?
- What are your top 3 recurring time drains?
- What's the one thing you'd do more of if you had the time?
Step 2: Identify Peak Creative Hours
Use the energy map above. If the user doesn't know, suggest tracking for 3 days:
- Every hour, note energy level (1-10) and what you were doing
- Look for patterns
Step 3: Block Deep Work First
| Rule | Detail |
|---|---|
| Minimum 2 hours | Anything less doesn't qualify as deep work |
| Morning priority | Deep work before noon. Always. |
| No context switching | One project per deep block |
| Airplane mode | Phone on DND, Slack closed, email closed |
| Visible signal | Use a status, a sign, or a door |
Step 4: Batch the Rest
- All meetings in one or two time windows (e.g., 2-4 PM)
- All admin in one block (e.g., 4-5 PM)
- All content/social in one block (e.g., Friday afternoons)
- All calls on specific days (e.g., Tuesday/Thursday)
Step 5: Add Buffers
| Buffer Type | Duration | When |
|---|---|---|
| Morning transition | 15 min | Before deep work starts |
| Between blocks | 10 min | Transition and reset |
| Overflow | 30-60 min | Daily or weekly for spillover |
| End-of-day close | 15 min | Review, plan tomorrow |
Step 6: Review and Iterate
Weekly review questions:
- Did I follow the schedule? If not, why?
- Which blocks were most productive?
- What interrupted my deep work?
- What needs to change next week?
Expect 70% adherence. Life happens. The goal is not perfection — it's intention.
Examples
Example 1: Overwhelmed Freelancer
Input: "I'm overwhelmed. Client work, my own projects, emails — it's all bleeding together."
Diagnosis: No separation between deep work and reactive work. Email is checked 15×/day.
Prescription:
IMMEDIATE CHANGES: 1. No email before 10 AM 2. Deep work block: 8-10 AM (protected, no phone) 3. Admin batch: 4-5 PM (all email, invoicing, scheduling) 4. One no-meeting day per week (Wednesday) SAMPLE DAY: 7:00 Morning routine 8:00 DEEP WORK (client project) 10:00 DEEP WORK (your own project) 12:00 Lunch + walk 1:00 Light work / email catch-up 2:00 Client calls (batched) 4:00 Admin / planning 5:00 Done
Example 2: Deadline Sprint
Input: "I have a book draft due in 10 days and I've written 0 words."
Reverse Plan:
Target: 40,000 words in 10 days = 4,000 words/day Daily writing blocks needed: 2× 2-hour deep blocks First block: 6-8 AM (before the world wakes up) Second block: 8-10 PM (after the world goes to sleep) Protect: No calls, no social events, no errands Sacrifice: TV, social media, perfectionism Daily schedule: 6-8 AM WRITING BLOCK 1 8-9 AM Breakfast + walk 9-12 PM Client work (income can't pause) 12-1 PM Lunch 1-3 PM Client work 3-5 PM Admin + errands 5-8 PM Dinner + rest 8-10 PM WRITING BLOCK 2 10 PM Done → sleep Accountability: Share word count with a friend every morning
Pro Tips
- Deep work isn't the only work — but it's the only work that moves the needle. Protect it like your income depends on it, because it does.
- The law of 3: Each day, identify exactly 3 outcomes that would make it a success. Block time for those 3 things before anything else. Everything else is bonus.
- Energy over time: A focused 2-hour block is worth more than 6 distracted hours. Schedule based on energy, not available clock time.
- The 5 PM hard stop: Without a hard stop, work expands to fill all available time. Choose a time when you stop, and protect it. Burnout isn't a badge of honor.
- Theme your days: Monday = deep work / writing. Tuesday = client calls. Wednesday = strategy. Thursday = content creation. Friday = admin + learning. Themes reduce decision fatigue about what to do each day.
- Schedule your priorities, not your leftovers: If you schedule deep work around your meetings, you'll never have deep work. Schedule deep work first, then see when meetings can fit.
- The 2-minute rule for admin: If a task takes <2 minutes, do it immediately during admin blocks. If it takes longer, add it to a "to do in next block" list.
Version History
- 38e2523 Current 2026-07-05 19:37


