Naming a feeling calms the brain
Putting an emotion into words measurably reduces amygdala activity. That's the published mechanism under the mood check — naming "this feels overwhelming" helps more than pushing through.
The alarm fires. You see it. And then — nothing. The task slips from "now" into "not now," and the app that reminded you has already moved on. That five-to-sixty-minute window, after the miss, is where you actually freeze. It's also where no product has ever stayed with you.
A calm timeline of what's ahead — grouped by part of day, never a wall of red. Overdue tasks turn a warm amber, not an alarming red. Nothing here is designed to make you feel behind.
Tap a task and Beginary asks one question: "How does thinking about this feel?" Naming the feeling — Fine, Wired, Heavy, or Stuck — routes you into a start experience that fits the brain you have right now.
No picker. No sub-tasks to organize first. One screen, one button: "It doesn't have to be good. It just has to start." The first 60 seconds count as starting — and that's the whole game.
Momentum gets noticed the moment it happens — "5 minutes in. The hardest part is behind you." No streaks to protect. No counter to break. Just proof you did the thing.
There's no single way to begin. So the mood check sends you somewhere different depending on what's actually in the way.
No right answer. No wrong answer. The question itself — naming the feeling — is the intervention.
The surfaces bring you back. These are the parts that carry you once you're here — from writing the task down to holding your attention through it.
Typing a task is its own hill. Say it out loud — "call the dentist tomorrow at three" — and Beginary turns it into a scheduled task. No forms, no fields.
"Call the dentist tomorrow at three."
Give Beginary the thing you've been avoiding. It splits it into small, doable steps and hands you the first one. Figuring out where to begin is the hard part — that's the part we do.
Once you've started, an optional soundscape rises gently, holds while you work, then softens as you finish. Already playing your own music? It stays out of the way. Off by default — on when you want it.
Each layer fires in gentle escalation. Each one assumes you wanted to do the thing — not that you forgot, not that you're lazy. Every layer is opt-in, and every layer is shame-free.
Always-on, with a one-tap "Start Now." When a task goes overdue, it glows a soft amber instead of shouting.
A grace-period timer right on the Dynamic Island. Start, or "Not now" — your call, no penalty either way.
Optional full-screen alert when the grace period ends — one tap drops you straight into Just Start mode.
The Apple Watch mirrors your day, surfaces the overdue glance, and lives on your face as a complication.
When reaching for your phone is one friction too many, the Apple Watch carries the whole loop. Your day, the overdue nudge, and a single tap into Just Start — all from a raised wrist.
ADHD interventions should be grounded in evidence — and we name our sources. Three findings shape how Beginary is built.
Putting an emotion into words measurably reduces amygdala activity. That's the published mechanism under the mood check — naming "this feels overwhelming" helps more than pushing through.
When you can't start, it's usually one of three axes that's blocking — not "willpower." Name the bottleneck and the right intervention changes. Beginary's nudge engine routes against exactly these.
ADHD adults don't fail at planning — they fail at the moment of initiation. They are distinct executive-function tasks, which is why a planning app can't fix a starting problem.
Want the long version? Read the writing — deep, cited explainers on task initiation.
Streaks punish the person who already feels bad about missing a day. If you've ever closed an app for a week after breaking a 47-day chain, you know exactly why.
The mechanic that replaces them is two words: "Welcome back." No broken counter. No day-count. No shame language anywhere in the product.
Planning apps are great at deciding what to do. None of them help with the part where you actually begin. Here's the difference in approach.
"I know what I need to do to remedy this situation, but I'm just too all over the place to take the right steps."
"ADHD brains resist systems even when they're helpful. You'll use it intensely for 3 days then ghost it for a week. The system needs to handle that inconsistency, not assume perfect user behavior."
Verbatim, unsolicited. The product is designed around the inconsistency — not against it.
The smallest next action is the whole game — and what to do when your brain won't do the breaking down.
7 min readThe executive-function failure that no planner addresses — and what actually helps.
9 min readThe freeze isn't laziness. It's a predictable gap — and it has a name.
7 min readInterest, Preparation, Mood — diagnose the bottleneck, change the intervention.
8 min readTask initiation is the executive function that lets you begin a task without undue delay. In ADHD it's commonly impaired — so you can know exactly what to do, want it done, and still not start. It's a neurological starting problem, not laziness or a lack of willpower.
Because knowing and starting are different executive functions. At the moment of beginning, a delayed-reward signal, time blindness, and a spike of stress or overwhelm stack up and stall you. More information or a louder reminder won't clear that — a smaller first step will.
Planners help you decide what to do; Beginary helps you actually begin. It stays with you in the five-to-sixty minutes after a reminder — when you froze — and routes you into the right kind of start based on how the task feels. It complements your planner rather than replacing it.
Yes. Say it out loud — "call the dentist tomorrow at three" — and Beginary turns it into a scheduled task, no forms or fields. Writing a task down is its own executive-function tax, so speaking it is often the lower hill.
An optional ambient sound that rises gently once you've started, holds while you work, then softens as you finish. It's off by default, and if you're already playing your own music it stays out of the way. It's sensory support — turn it on only if it helps you stay in the task.
No. Beginary will never ship streaks, and overdue tasks turn a calm amber instead of an alarming red. There's no counter to break and no shame language anywhere in the product. When you come back after a gap, the response is simply "Welcome back."
Beginary is built for iPhone and Apple Watch. The watch mirrors your day, surfaces the overdue glance, and puts a one-tap start on your wrist and watch face — for when reaching for your phone is one friction too many.
Beginary launches on the App Store in summer 2026. You can join the waitlist now for early access — we'll send one email when it's ready, and that's it.
No. Beginary is a productivity tool grounded in published research — not a medical device or treatment. It's educational and supportive, and isn't a substitute for professional care. For clinical questions, talk to a qualified professional.
Join the waitlist for early access. We'll send one email when it's ready. That's it.
No spam. No streaks. Unsubscribe anytime.