Bill Gates’ Chair-Rocking Habit: Thinking Without Distraction

When Bill Gates needed to think—not skim, not react, not decide quickly—he didn’t pace the room or reach for a notebook. He rocked. Back and forth. Slowly. Almost absentmindedly. To people around him, it looked like nervous energy or a childhood habit that never faded. In reality, it was a deliberate way to hold his mind in place long enough for difficult ideas to fully form. The chair-rocking wasn’t about comfort. It was about removing distraction without adding effort. A Mind Constantly Under Load :contentReference[oaicite:0] spent decades operating inside extreme cognitive pressure. Software architecture, competitive strategy, negotiations, long-term bets—his work demanded sustained abstract thinking, often with incomplete information. Meetings were frequent. Interruptions constant. Decisions rarely simple. In that environment, pure…
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