// the relaxing rain break for macOS

The AI doesn’t need a break.
But you do.

One keystroke turns your screen into calm rain and gives you a real break - 1 to 21 minutes. Your AI agents keep shipping while you breathe. A free macOS menu-bar app.

Take a short break. A rain break. A real one.

v0.1.2 · 3 MB · macOS 14+

// why a rain break

AI agents made your Mac as addictive as a social feed.

Dopamine hits, infinite scroll, one more prompt - the same loop that makes social media so easy to love now lives in your terminal. Great for shipping. A lot for one human. A short rain break gives your head a moment to catch up, and you come back sharper.

You cannot out-work software that never sleeps. So stop trying. Out-rest it instead.

It’s not how hard you work. It’s whether you can stop.

why we’re all so tired

// the research

Why are we suddenly so burned out from AI?

Not a vibe - a pattern. Straight from the threads:

Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs
whywhywhywhy on I miss thinking hard | reply
I feel tired working with AI much faster than I did when I used to code… I don’t even bother reading the code anymore. Manually coding engaged my brain much more and somehow was less exhausting.
shubhamintech on 'AI brain fry' is real | reply
When your AI does 8 things right and then confidently does the 9th wrong, you spend mental energy second-guessing everything. Supervising an unreliable system is more exhausting than just doing the task yourself.
sigbottle on Bored of talking about AI? | reply
I feel physically drained coming back from work and going to use more AI… it is exhausting keeping up. I would burn through a week’s worth of credits in a day.
neebz on Vibe engineering | reply
Reviewing LLM-generated code is way more mentally draining… Productivity definitely went up, but my understanding of the codebase dropped fast.
Plenty of people find vibe coding mentally exhausting - not everyone wants to be a manager - and think LLMs suck the joy that was left in programming.

The science is catching up to the feeling. MIT wired 54 writers with EEG headsets: LLM users showed up to 55% lower brain engagement and the lowest sense of ownership of their own words - they call it cognitive debt. And 77% of workers using AI say it actually added to their workload.

Real comments, pulled from the Hacker News API. Links go to the originals.

// the honest catch

There is no skip button.

The break holds for the full time you set. No skip, no snooze. So for once you actually stop - and come back clearer, calmer, and faster than the version of you that never looked away.

That’s the value. A break you can’t talk yourself out of.

so what do you do about it

A break worth taking. One you can’t weasel out of.

01

Actually relaxing

Calm, full-screen rain that rises, holds, and softly settles - not a ticking timer bar. Somewhere to put your eyes down and let your shoulders drop.

02

Your agents don’t pause

The rain takes your screen, not your work. Claude Code and Codex keep running while you rest. You lose nothing by stepping away - that is the whole trick.

03

It holds

Keys, clicks, and scroll are gently blocked for the full break. No skip, no snooze, no “one more thing.” By design, the only early exit is a full shutdown.

04

Your rhythm, one keystroke

One, two, five, seven, twelve, or twenty-one minute breaks straight from the menu bar. A quick breather or a real pause - pick one and the rain takes over.

// the whole app

One menu. That’s the whole thing.

No dashboard, no settings maze. RainBreak lives in your menu bar - pick a length, the rain takes over.

Three steps. Then it just runs.

  1. 1

    Install and launch

    A quick first-run setup, with rain already falling behind it.

  2. 2

    Work as usual

    RainBreak waits in the menu bar. Your agents run. The rain is one keystroke away.

  3. 3

    Take the break

    Pick a length. The screen turns to rain - and holds it until you are done.

take your first rain break
RainBreak app icon

Give yourself a real break.

Take a break. Take a RainBreak.

Download RainBreakfree · for macOS

v0.1.2 · 3 MB · signed DMG

  • Apple-notarized
  • Apple silicon & Intel
  • macOS 14+
  • No sign-up

// for the skeptic (hi)

It blocks your input. Here is exactly how - and what can’t go wrong.

How does it block the keyboard and mouse?
Through macOS’s normal input-monitoring APIs (a CGEventTap plus event monitors) - the same mechanism screen-time and accessibility tools use. No kernel extension, no driver, nothing that can wedge your Mac.
What if it crashes?
The block lives in the RainBreak process. If it ever crashes or is killed, the block dies with it and your Mac comes back instantly - you are never locked out by a bug, only by design.
And if I really need out of a break?
By default you wait it out - that is the point - or shut the Mac down. If you want a panic key, turn on the double-Esc emergency exit in Settings; it is off by default.
Is it spying on my screen?
No account, no telemetry, no servers. Everything runs locally on your Mac, and it is Apple-notarized so Gatekeeper has already checked it.