You’ve seen the Urge tab. Maybe you’ve tapped it once. Most men use it as a panic button and then never learn what it’s actually doing. Today is the teach.
The Urge Flow has a specific structure: trigger selection, guided breathing, an action choice, and a reflection at the end. Every step is there for a reason, and using it skillfully matters more than using it often.
Trigger selection is the first step. Naming the trigger (boredom, stress, late night, after scrolling, etc.) forces the naming work from Day 4 into the moment itself. You stop reacting; you start observing. That small shift changes the whole flow.
Breathing is next. Four-in, hold, four-out, hold — four cycles. Four minutes is long enough for most urges to crest and start decaying (Day 3’s wave). The breathing isn’t mystical; it’s just structured time. Structured time is what an urge can’t survive.
The action choice comes after: Move, Refocus, Reset Senses, Urge Relief. You pick what fits the moment. Then you do it. Then you come back and mark whether it helped.
The most skillful use of the flow is opening it early — at the first body-signature twinge from Day 2, not after the narrator has already won Day 5’s argument. Early usage is cheap. Late usage is a save. Both work. Early is easier.
Tomorrow: what to do when the app isn’t with you.
The Urge Flow is a structured four-minute interrupt. Open it early, not late. Trigger → breathing — action — reflection. Each step earns its place.
Open the Urge tab right now — calm, no real urge. Walk through the flow once. See the shape before you need it.