Turn your phone into a habit hub with a single tap—add habits, see colored cards, track streaks, set smart reminders, and group them by custom categories. Boost consistency with templates, journals, squad sharing, crisis‑mode micro‑tasks, analytics, and one‑click export/archive for a clean, resilient routine.
Pick a habit and put it on the screen you see every morning. I tap the + button on my dashboard, type “Morning stretch”, choose the Health category, and hit save. The habit pops up as a colored card—green for health, blue for productivity—so I spot it instantly.
Start with check‑off habits. A single tap marks “Drank water” as done. No timer, no fuss. When you need more focus, switch to a timer habit. I set “Read for 25 min” and the built‑in Pomodoro timer counts down. Finishing the timer automatically checks the box, reinforcing the effort.
Every day the app shows a number next to the habit—my current streak. It’s a visual reminder that I’ve been consistent. If I miss a day, the count drops to zero, which feels like a small sting. To protect the streak on a busy travel day, I hit “freeze”. A few freezes are free each month, enough to cover the occasional chaos.
I created custom categories for “Side projects” and “Mindfulness”. Each category gets its own hue, so the dashboard looks like a palette rather than a spreadsheet. When I glance at the screen, I instantly know which part of my day I’m looking at—no need to read every label.
Not every habit belongs on a daily calendar. For my push‑pull‑legs routine, I set the habit to repeat on Mon/Wed/Fri, then Tue/Thu/Sat for the other split. The app respects the pattern, and I never forget to log a rest day because the card stays gray until the next scheduled slot.
One weekend I wanted a quick “Morning Routine” starter. I tapped a habit template, and a whole set—meditation, journal entry, water, stretch—appeared with one tap. It saved me the time of typing each line and gave me a ready‑made flow to tweak.
Below the habit grid, a tiny notebook icon opens my daily journal. I jot a quick note about how the stretch felt, add a mood emoji, and answer the AI‑generated prompt about today’s energy level. Those entries get auto‑tagged, so later I can search “energy dip” and see every day I felt sluggish.
I invited a friend to a two‑person squad. In the Social tab we see each other’s completion percentages. A quick glance tells me if we’re both on track, and the squad chat lets us cheer each other on. When we both hit a 7‑day streak, the app flashes a tiny badge—no big ceremony, just a quiet high‑five.
Some evenings I’m exhausted. I tap the brain icon on the dashboard, and the screen shrinks to three micro‑activities: a 30‑second breathing exercise, a vent‑style journal prompt, and a “tiny win” like making the bed. No streak pressure, just a way to move forward a fraction.
Each habit has its own reminder toggle. I set my “Drink water” reminder for 9 am, 12 pm, and 4 pm. The app pushes a notification at those times, nudging me without feeling spammy. I can adjust the time in the habit settings whenever my schedule shifts.
The Analytics tab shows a line graph of completion rates over the past month. I focus on the dip around the holiday weekend, then check the habit list to see which ones I paused. The visual helps me decide where to re‑introduce a habit, rather than scrolling through endless logs.
I love tracking my current book. In the Reading tab I log “Atomic Habits”, set the progress to 45 %, and note the chapter I’m on. When I finish, the habit “Read for 25 min” automatically logs a win, tying the two activities together without extra taps.
Planning a move? I head to Settings, hit “Export data”, and get a JSON file with every habit, streak, and journal entry. If something goes wrong during the move, I can import the file later and pick up right where I left off.
A habit I stopped doing months ago still lingers on the screen, cluttering my view. I swipe left, choose “Archive”, and it disappears. The data stays in the background, so if I ever want to revive “Evening yoga”, I can pull it back with a tap.
And that’s how I keep my phone as a habit hub—simple taps, visual cues, and a few safety nets when life gets messy.
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