Home · The day is never lost
Pillars 01 · 02 · 13
The day is never lost.
Miss something and the day recomposes around you. It never breaks. You’re celebrated for starting, and every view shows how far you’ve come instead of how much you missed.
Try it: miss a task on purpose
No red, no “overdue,” nothing breaks. It just recomposes the day around the miss and waits for you there.
The day recomposes, it never breaks.
Missing a task is just information here, not a failure. The plan holds its place and waits for you, and it never cascades into a pile of red.
- ✓
Miss a task and it quietly slots itself back in. Nothing says “overdue,” nothing breaks. Free
- ✓
“Passed by,” never “missed.” The words stay neutral everywhere, so there’s no red and no failure marks. Free
- ✓
Fresh Start wipes a task’s history for today, so picking it up again feels like a clean start. It even gets its own little animation. Free
- ✓
Come back after days or weeks away to a warm welcome instead of a wall of guilt. Old tasks fold themselves into history. Free
- ✓
“Here’s what still fits today” is one short, hand-picked list when you return, never a rebuilt pile. Free
- ✓
A gentle nudge when the same task keeps sliding, with four calm options. One of them is “this one wasn’t realistic, and that’s okay.” Free
- ✓
End-of-day catch-up asks “did you actually do any of these?” One swipe marks it done, celebrated after the fact. Free
- ✓
“Remove permanently, that’s okay” sits right there as an equal choice, never buried. Free
The reschedule engine pauses itself when you vanish, instead of stacking up a week of failures while you were gone. It waits, then recomposes the day once you’re back.
Most planners
Come back after a rough week to 40 red “overdue” tasks and a broken streak.
composeDay
“Welcome back. Here’s what still fits today.” The rest quietly became history.
Celebrate the attempt, not the result.
For an ADHD brain the hard part is the start, not the finish. So that’s where the good feeling fires, every time, with no judgement attached.
Go on, press it. Then press it again.
- ✓
A satisfying animation and sound the moment you tap “I’m starting,” every single time, the fifth restart included. Free
- ✓
A separate celebration of its own for finishing inside your own time estimate. Free
- ✓
“Done enough” closes a task as a full win. “You did what you could, and that counts.” Free
- ✓
Your personal best, quietly tracked per task. You’re only ever up against yourself, never a standard. Free
- ✓
Surprise micro-rewards that fire on real moments (a start, a comeback), never on idle app-opening. Free
- ✓
A Comeback Celebration when you turn up again after time away. “You came back, and that’s the whole game.” Free
- ✓
A quiet streak bonus for three on-time finishes in a row. The counter is never shown, and a broken streak stays invisible. Free
The celebration lands on the attempt, not the checkmark. And a streak here can only ever reward you, never shame you.
See your life, never your failures.
Every view is built to show how far you’ve come, so you can look at your own week and stay composed. No chart here can point down at you.
- ✓
A progress view that only ever climbs. Flat on the quiet days, never down. Free
- ✓
A GitHub-style engagement grid in greens and neutrals. A red day doesn’t exist here. Free
- ✓
An end-of-day wrap-up that shows only what you did, and closes the day on a win. Free
- ✓
“Invisible wins” count the ideas you captured, the inbox you sorted, the tasks you almost started, so a day never reads as “did nothing.” Free
- ✓
Day Forecast lets the day introduce itself as texture, the light stretches and the busy ones, instead of a scary list. Free
- ✓
“Today’s Win” is the one thing that would make today feel good, dropped into your peak-energy window. Free
- ✓
Intentional Leisure treats gaming, movies, and rest as real tasks worth celebrating, so a restful day still reads as a full one. Free
- ✓
An honest “reality view” that shows the real dips, for the day you want the unvarnished picture. It stays off unless you turn it on. Pro
A progress chart that literally cannot go down, and “invisible wins” surfaced for the day you’d swear you did nothing.