the reader ✽
“Fourteen pages of custody language, read in under two minutes. I'd been meaning to do the transcription for six months.”
from the kitchen tables ✽
We asked five families, two attorneys, and a mediator what actually changed. Nobody said “everything.” Everyone said “something.”
featured · issue 01
We spent two years arguing about Tuesdays. The app read our order, and suddenly Tuesdays were just Tuesdays again.
the reader ✽
“Fourteen pages of custody language, read in under two minutes. I'd been meaning to do the transcription for six months.”
the swap desk ✽
“The swap desk ended 90% of our scheduling arguments. Nobody keeps score in their head anymore.”
the quiet record ✽
“The records are designed to withstand authenticity challenges. I'd recommend the workflow to any family-law practice managing high-conflict cases.”
the reader ✽
“Two households, three kids from two marriages, one calendar. The first week felt like relief.”
the free tier ✽
“I bring clients here when their ex “won't use anything.” One card, two logins — the objection evaporates.”
the tone coach ✽
“I used to dread sending the Tuesday message. The tone coach reworded mine once and I've never sent the first draft since.”
the reader + record ✽
“We were hostile for the first year. The app didn't fix that. But it stopped being the thing we fought about.”
* Illustrative composite based on conversations with multiple family-law attorneys.
letter · issue 02 · from a reader
My ex and I had a shared spreadsheet. Tabs for swaps, receipts, a running tally of who gave in more. It was the most hostile document I have ever owned.
We deleted it three weeks after switching. Not on principle. It just became unnecessary — the fairness score was already doing the math, and neither of us was in the mood to argue with a number.
That is the whole pitch, as far as I'm concerned. The app is not a miracle. It is a well-designed removal of the things we were using to hurt each other.
— R., mom of one
Thirty days free. Then, if you want, tell us how it changed. We read every letter.