Stop One
The lock.
You tap Instagram, X, TikTok, Reddit — anything you've put behind the gate. Instead of the feed, a quiet shield. Before you scroll, write.
Chapter I · The Pause
InkFirst locks the apps that hijack your time, then turns what you write into a book of your life — chapter by chapter, in literary prose.
Chapter II · The Problem
Most of those unlocks are reflex, not intent. The notification you didn't ask for. The lock screen you tapped without thinking. The thumb that found a feed before your mind found a thought. You don't have a discipline problem — your phone is engineered, by people far smarter than its critics, to hold your attention. InkFirst doesn't shame the reflex. It just intercepts it. A pause, a few sentences, and the apps open.
Chapter III · The Ritual
Stop One
You tap Instagram, X, TikTok, Reddit — anything you've put behind the gate. Instead of the feed, a quiet shield. Before you scroll, write.
Stop Two
A short, thoughtful question that draws on what you've written before. Not a journal homework assignment. A nudge: what's actually on your mind?
Stop Three
Twenty to a hundred and fifty words — your choice. You write, you submit, the apps open for ten to a hundred and twenty minutes. Then the gate returns.
Chapter IV · The Transformation
Each week, your entries come back to you in the voice of a literary memoir. Months become chapters. A year becomes a volume.
Chapter V · The Book
The week began with a small refusal. He had carried the phone to the counter as he always did, but this time the screen stayed dark. There was, he thought, a kind of pride in that — the kind that doesn't need witnesses.
From Chapter Three: The Turning Point · generated for a real beta user
Tap the book to turn the page
Chapter VI · The Voice
Pick the voice your book should sound like. The same kitchen-table evening, told ten different ways — from Annie Ernaux to Hemingway to a Raymond Chandler narrator who has seen everything. Choose during onboarding, change any time in Settings.
The scene You sat at the kitchen table after dinner and wrote down what the day had been. Each voice below tells the same moment in its own register.
You had sat at the kitchen table after dinner, the late light pooling across the grain of the wood, and you began to write — not because anything had happened exactly, but because the act of writing was how you knew anything had happened at all.
You sat at the kitchen table after dinner, the light still warm on the wood, and you wrote down what you could remember of the day. It was enough. It's always enough.
You sat at the table. It was after dinner. You wrote for ten minutes. The day was done. The light was good.
You came back to the kitchen table after dinner like you'd come back to it a thousand nights before. The pen was cheap. The paper was cheaper. You wrote down what happened anyway, because nobody else was going to remember it for you.
You sat at the kitchen table after dinner. You wrote. The light from the window fell across the paper. You described the day as it had occurred.
You sat your ass down at the kitchen table after dinner and wrote the whole stupid day out. The hard parts. The parts you were proud of. The parts you were not. Nothing else makes a day hold still long enough for you to see it.
You sat at the kitchen table after dinner and wrote. The day had passed. You recorded the parts that mattered. That was sufficient.
You sat at the kitchen table after dinner like a tiny archivist of your own evening. The coffee was lukewarm. The day had been, let's say, seventy percent shrug. You wrote it down anyway, because what else.
You sat at the kitchen table after dinner. You wrote for ten minutes. The day had three parts worth saving.
Hey — so today was a lot. I sat down at the kitchen table after dinner to write some of it out for you. Mostly so you'd know what this week actually felt like, not what I might decide it felt like later.
Chapter VII · The Look
Morning Latte Sky for the day. Ocean Breeze for slow afternoons. Rose Dusk for the wind-down. Ink Noir for the late hours. Or pick Sunrise and let the app shift with the light outside your window.
Chapter VIII · The Intelligence
InkFirst reads your entries to write the book and to surface the patterns you might not see yourself. It never reads them out loud.
Each Sunday, a calm three-paragraph reflection on what your week was actually about — surfaced from your own words, in your own register.
Once a month, the Mirror is rewritten as a literary chapter — third-person, present tense, with a title and an epigraph drawn from the month's mood.
If your mood is drifting downward over a stretch of days — or if a stress signal is building up — InkFirst tells you, gently, before you hit the wall.
On any morning, InkFirst can quietly hand you the entry from a year before — the small mercy of seeing how far the present has wandered from the past.
Chapter IX · The Promise
InkFirst is a journaling app. The whole point is the writing being yours. We built it so it stays that way.
Entries live on your phone in SwiftData and sync only to your private iCloud.
The systems that read your prose never see your name, email, or device. Only the writing itself.
No third-party tracking SDKs. No event pipelines. No funnel dashboards. None.
Coda
We're days away from launch on iOS. You can be one of the first hundred to fill a Life Book.