App Blocker for Writers
Stay with the sentence.
Not the scroll.
Fella blocks distracting iPhone apps while you draft, revise, or research. No writing streaks and no focus dashboard—just one less exit from the difficult part of the work.
Writing distraction rarely announces itself as distraction. It arrives as research, checking whether an editor replied, looking up one fact, finding the perfect reference, or taking a short break after a hard paragraph. The phone makes every one of those exits immediate.
A distraction-free editor can simplify the screen you write on, but it cannot control the iPhone beside it. You can hide toolbars, enter full-screen mode, and close every browser tab while Instagram, Reddit, news, email, and YouTube remain one reach away.
Fella protects the other screen. Choose the iPhone apps that pull you out of the draft and keep them blocked by default. If something truly requires access, use the one 5-minute daily unlock. When time ends, the apps lock again without another decision.
The phone is most tempting when the writing gets real
The urge to check often appears at a point of uncertainty. You do not know the opening, the argument has a gap, the character's choice feels false, or the next sentence will require a decision. The feed offers relief before you have to resolve it.
That relief trains an unhelpful sequence. Difficulty, reach, scroll, return. Even a short interruption can leave part of the previous task occupying attention when you come back. In a long-form project, rebuilding voice, logic, scene, or structure is often more expensive than the check itself.
Research can become socially acceptable avoidance. More sources feel productive, but not every unresolved sentence needs another tab. Often the fastest path is to mark the gap, keep drafting, and return with a precise research question later.
A hard app boundary does not make writing easy. It makes the honest problem visible. With the usual escape unavailable, you can lower the standard for a first draft, write a placeholder, or sit with the question instead of losing the session to somebody else's words.
Give drafting, research, and communication different rules
Drafting needs continuity. Work from the outline and materials already gathered. Use placeholders such as “[check date]” or “[source needed]” instead of abandoning the paragraph every time a fact is missing.
Research needs a question. Write down exactly what you need to establish, search for that evidence, capture the source, and stop. Leave library, dictionary, reference, and notes apps unblocked only if they do not become exits of their own.
Communication needs a channel. Editors, co-authors, interview subjects, and clients may require access. Keep the smallest useful communication route open—perhaps email or Messages—while blocking feeds where professional and personal attention become mixed.
Revision needs distance from reaction. Feedback can be useful without being constant. Blocking review sites, comments, social mentions, and performance dashboards while revising helps you respond to the manuscript rather than the latest signal about it.
How to set up Fella for a writing practice
1. Identify the real escape apps. For one writer it is Instagram; for another it is Reddit, YouTube, news, email, a game, or even a publishing dashboard. Use your behavior, not a generic productivity list.
2. Keep the writing stack intact. Fella is not meant to block the editor, cloud storage, voice recorder, scanner, dictionary, reading app, or other tools you genuinely use to produce the work.
3. Put the phone beyond automatic reach. Fella stops selected apps from opening; distance stops the phone itself from becoming a repeated object of attention. Use a separate clock or timer if those are your reasons for keeping it on the desk.
4. Define the emergency unlock before using it. Five minutes can retrieve a source, confirm an editor's message, or access a specific post. It is not a general writing break.
5. Return through a tiny next action. When you sit down, do not command yourself to “write the chapter.” Open the document, reread the final paragraph, and write one deliberately imperfect sentence.
Which writers benefit from an all-day block?
Novelists, screenwriters, and nonfiction authors working across long arcs. Holding character, argument, chronology, and tone becomes easier when a difficult passage cannot instantly send you into a different stream of information.
Freelance writers balancing client work and self-promotion. Social platforms may help find work, but they do not need to remain open throughout reporting, drafting, and revision. One stable channel for clients can stay available.
Students, academics, and researchers doing long-form writing. A selected-app block can protect synthesis and drafting while reference tools stay open. Fella does not block websites on the computer, so pair it with a deliberate browser setup if that is where distraction lives.
Writers who want sessions rather than an all-day rule may need another tool. Fella does not start a 25-minute sprint or open apps after a scheduled writing block. Its value is that selected iPhone distractions are already unavailable whenever you begin.
App blocker for writers FAQ
It removes the quick escape into social media, news, video, and other selected iPhone apps when drafting becomes difficult. Fella keeps those apps blocked by default.
No. Fella does not replace your editor. It blocks selected distracting apps on your iPhone while you write elsewhere.
Yes. Leave dictionaries, reference managers, library apps, notes, cloud storage, interview tools, and essential communication available when they support the work.
No. Fella is not a Pomodoro timer or session planner. Selected apps remain blocked all day, with one 5-minute emergency unlock per day.
No. It cannot produce ideas or solve a draft. It can remove one common avoidance route so you stay with the page long enough to work through the next sentence.
Build a quieter writing system with the deep work app blocker, focus mode app blocker, and automatic app checking guides. Creators can also see the app blocker for content creators.