Decision Fatigue: Automating the Non-Creative Choices

Key Takeaway: Digital fatigue is not just in your mind; it is in your eye muscles. Staring at a fixed distance for hours causes a physical spasm that lowers your mental processing speed.

Physical exhaustion from digital illustration is not just about your wrists and back. Staring at a screen locked at one distance physically strains the tiny muscles in your eyes. When you are in a flow state, you forget to move, but your eyes are working harder than any other part of your body.

The Symptoms: The Hidden Drain

If you deal with blurry vision, dry eyes, or a sudden, unexplained drop in your ability to track spatial relationships after a long drawing sprint, you are experiencing focal fatigue. When you stare at a fixed, close-up object for hours, your eyes lock into a state of spasm. Furthermore, your blink rate drops by over 60% while looking at a screen. This leads to dryness and irritation, which your brain interprets as general mental fatigue.

The Physics: The Contrast Trap

Screen glare and high-contrast light, like a bright white canvas against a dark user interface, disrupt your visual stamina. Your eyes are constantly adjusting to the flicker of the screen and the harsh light output. This constant micro-adjustment wears down your visual endurance, making you feel “burnt out” much faster than you would be if you were drawing on paper.

The Mitigation: Environmental Resets

You cannot expect your eyes to function at 100% capacity for six hours straight. You need to reset your visual field. By changing your focal distance, you manually release the tension in your eye muscles and trigger a mental refresh.

The Action: The 20-20-20 Rule

Make this a non-negotiable part of your workflow. Every 20 minutes:

  1. Stop: Look away from your screen.
  2. 20 Feet: Focus your eyes on an object at least 20 feet away.
  3. 20 Seconds: Hold that gaze for 20 seconds.

This simple break forces your eye muscles to relax from their close-up “lock” and allows your brain to recalibrate. It takes less than half a minute, but it will keep your eyes fresh for hours longer.

Actionable Checklists

For Decision Fatigue:

  • [ ] Audit: List the three decisions you make every time you open your software.
  • [ ] Template: Save these as permanent templates.
  • [ ] Eliminate: Delete any unused brushes or palettes that clutter your decision-making.

For Eye Strain:

  • [ ] Set a Reminder: Use a desktop timer to remind you of the 20-20-20 rule.
  • [ ] Adjust Lighting: Lower your screen brightness to match the ambient light in your room.
  • [ ] Hydrate: Keep water nearby to help with dry eyes.

Leave a Comment