Many of us are already used to forcing Apps on the iPhone. Just a flick from the bottom of the screen up to see the list of recently opened Apps, and from there. We choose the App that we want to delete and we sweep it up. This ends the execution process of the App if it was really working because this is something that iOS does not indicate. In this list of recently opened apps, only the most recent ones can actually be running and depending mainly on the amount of RAM your iPhone model has, and the RAM usage of the App, there may be more or fewer Apps running in the background at the same time.
In any case, by dragging the App up we make sure that it will not remain working in any way.
Now with the Apple Watch, how do we do this? – The truth is that there is a method, but it is not obvious at all.
The first thing we have to do is to leave the side button, the one under the crown wheel pressed. This screen will appear to make emergency calls.
If at that moment, we press the button on the crown wheel for a few seconds, this screen will disappear. There is no indication of anything else – we will simply see our clock, the one we have set, without any messages. What we have done is to eliminate the execution process of the native App that was running in the background at that time. If something was wrong with it, after this it will most likely be fixed when we open it again.
If not, it is a persistent bug that only its developers can fix, with an update. You can leave a comment in the reviews of the App and ask them to solve it, or contact them through their website if they have one available.