Product LaunchYour Journal Has Been Keeping Secrets From You
Daylogue today launched a new journaling feature that reads across a user's entries, finds recurring themes, and writes a short summary connecting them. Instead of a list of separate journal entries, users…
LOS ANGELES, CA, June 10, 2026·4 min read
CultureMen Don't Journal. Here's What Happened When We Built One That Actually Worked for Them.
Daylogue today published data from its first year of user behavior showing that men who have never kept a journal in their lives are using its voice check-in feature consistently, something no…
LOS ANGELES, CA, June 16, 2026·5 min read
Privacy & TrustThis Mental Wellness App Will Tell You Exactly What It Can and Can't See
Daylogue today published an honest, line-by-line account of what its servers can and cannot read. It is the kind of document no mental wellness app has ever put out, in a category…
LOS ANGELES, CA, July 15, 2026·6 min read
Product UpdateYou've Been Writing About the Same Three Things for Months. Themes Proves It.
Daylogue today launched Themes, a new feature that pulls back the curtain on what users have actually been writing about. Instead of a list of separate journal entries, users now see the…
LOS ANGELES, CA, August 12, 2026·4 min read
EnterpriseSchools Can Now Track Student Wellness Without Reading a Single Journal Entry
Daylogue today launched Daylogue for Organizations, a version of its pattern journal built for schools, universities, employers, and clinical support programs that need to understand how their people are doing, without reading…
LOS ANGELES, CA, September 9, 2026·4 min read
FeatureThe First Personality Quiz That Changes Its Answer After You Close It
Every personality quiz in history ends when you submit the last answer. Daylogue's starts there.
LOS ANGELES, CA, September 9, 2026·4 min read
CultureThe Notes App Screenshot Generation Has a Quieter Successor
In 2025, the Notes app screenshot became the confessional format of choice — raw, unedited, slightly blurry. In 2026, something quieter is happening.
LOS ANGELES, CA, September 15, 2026·4 min read
CultureFirst-Gen Kids Learn Two Emotional Languages. Nobody Teaches Them to Translate.
First-generation Americans are often described as code-switchers at work. The less-told story is that code-switching started at the dinner table.
LOS ANGELES, CA, September 15, 2026·4 min read
FeatureYou Took a 10-Minute Quiz. It's Been Telling People Who You Are Ever Since.
Daylogue today introduced a new way to think about personality and self-knowledge: instead of a test, a conversation. While DiSC, Myers-Briggs, the Enneagram, and similar assessments give users a label from a…
LOS ANGELES, CA, October 21, 2026·5 min read
EnterpriseYour Annual Engagement Survey Is a Rearview Mirror. Daylogue Is a Windshield.
Daylogue today launched Team Signals, an always-on team-level wellness dashboard that gives HR leaders and managers a live read on burnout, stress, and energy across their workforce, and gives every employee a…
LOS ANGELES, CA, November 17, 2026·4 min read
Trust & SafetyMost Mental Wellness Apps Have Zero Clinicians on Staff. Daylogue Has One.
Daylogue today announced that Christopher Lewis, Ph.D., has joined the company as Clinical Advisor. In the role, Lewis is responsible for reviewing what Daylogue's AI surfaces to users: the words it uses…
LOS ANGELES, CA, December 8, 2026·5 min read
CultureYear Two of Not Drinking Is Nothing Like What You Read About
The sober-curious movement created excellent content for year one: the revelatory months, the skin glow, the clarity, the community. Year two has no arc. It just keeps going, which turns out to…
LOS ANGELES, CA, January 7, 2027·4 min read
FeatureNobody Read Your Week Back to You. Daylogue Does It Every Sunday.
The Sunday night feeling has a name, a product category, and a treatment protocol. What it has rarely had is a reader.
LOS ANGELES, CA, January 7, 2027·3 min read
CultureThe Job Was Gone in 15 Minutes. The Identity Took 8 Months.
After the meeting ends and the laptop is wiped, the immediate problem is the resume. The slower problem is the question nobody in the severance packet addresses: who were you before you…
LOS ANGELES, CA, January 12, 2027·4 min read
WellnessThe Wellness Industry Tracked Your Sleep and Steps. It Forgot Your Inner Life.
Daylogue today made the case for what it calls the missing instrument in modern wellness: a daily practice that tracks not just what a person is doing, but what they're actually thinking…
LOS ANGELES, CA, January 13, 2027·5 min read
Milestone10,000 People Just Read Their Own Year Back. Here Is What They Found.
Daylogue today released its first aggregate emotional pattern report, drawn from anonymized, opt-in data across 10,000 users who completed a full year of check-ins. No user data was identified. The patterns were.
LOS ANGELES, CA, January 14, 2027·4 min read
FeatureYour Recurring Thoughts Have Names. You Just Have Not Seen the List Yet.
Most people, if asked what they think about most, would name two or three things. Daylogue's Themes view regularly returns a list that surprises them.
LOS ANGELES, CA, January 14, 2027·3 min read
CultureThere's One Person in Your Head More Than Anyone Else. You Probably Don't Know Who.
Daylogue today launched People, a new view that ranks the specific humans who keep appearing in a user's journal entries and shows how the user has been feeling each time each person…
LOS ANGELES, CA, January 20, 2027·4 min read
CultureNobody Told You the Commute Would Feel Like a Loss
When companies started mandating office returns in 2023, the public debate was about productivity, real estate, and culture. The private debate, the one happening in journals and voice memos and 11 PM…
LOS ANGELES, CA, February 3, 2027·4 min read
CultureRest Is Political and Nobody Is Tracking When Black Women Actually Get It
"Rest is resistance" entered the cultural vocabulary around 2021 and has been cycling through think-pieces, book titles, and wellness content ever since. The data behind it has been mostly rhetorical.
LOS ANGELES, CA, February 3, 2027·4 min read
CultureBeing the Only One in the Room Is a Pattern, Not a Moment
Being the only person of your identity in a professional space is widely acknowledged and poorly understood. The documentation has mostly been statistical: representation numbers, retention rates, pipeline data. The emotional texture…
LOS ANGELES, CA, February 10, 2027·4 min read
MilestoneDaylogue Expands Its Clinical Advisory Board as Wellness Apps Face New Scrutiny
Daylogue today announced the expansion of its Clinical Advisory Board, adding licensed clinicians, researchers, and public health professionals to the team that reviews the app's crisis detection architecture, privacy map, and content…
LOS ANGELES, CA, February 11, 2027·3 min read
CultureSpotify Knows Your Music. Your Photos Know Your Face. Daylogue Reads Both.
Daylogue today launched Story, a feature that connects a user's journal check-ins with the signals their life is already producing, the songs they listen to on repeat, the photos they take and…
LOS ANGELES, CA, February 17, 2027·4 min read
MilestoneDaylogue Comes to Apple Watch. Your Wrist Now Knows What Your Mind Has Been Saying.
Apple Watch has tracked your heart rate, sleep, and steps for a decade. It has never asked how you feel about any of it.
LOS ANGELES, CA, March 4, 2027·3 min read
CultureThe Sunday Scaries Aren't Random. Daylogue Will Tell You Exactly What Triggers Them.
Daylogue today launched Work Patterns, a view inside its pattern journal that turns vague work dread into specifics. Users learn which day of the week their stress spikes, which meeting or calendar…
LOS ANGELES, CA, March 10, 2027·4 min read
CulturePeople Are Grieving Their AI Companions. Nobody Knows What to Call That.
In 2025 and 2026, AI companion platforms made product decisions that ended relationships millions of people had formed with non-human entities. The clinical vocabulary does not have a word for what that…
LOS ANGELES, CA, April 7, 2027·4 min read
CultureNeurodivergent People Have Always Known Something Was Different. Now They Have Words.
The vocabulary for neurodivergence — masking, rejection sensitive dysphoria, executive dysfunction, sensory overload — has moved from clinical literature to public discourse in roughly five years. For adults who grew up without…
LOS ANGELES, CA, April 8, 2027·4 min read
MilestoneYou Wrote 800 Journal Entries Last Year. You Re-Read Zero of Them.
Daylogue today crossed a milestone no other app has reached: a user's own journal, read back to them. Every active Daylogue user now gets a short, plain-language summary of what their entries…
LOS ANGELES, CA, April 14, 2027·4 min read
CultureThey Are Working Two Full-Time Jobs and Nobody Knows. Their Journal Does.
At peak overemployment in 2022 and 2023, online forums estimated hundreds of thousands of knowledge workers were holding two full-time remote jobs simultaneously. The public conversation was about the money. The private…
LOS ANGELES, CA, April 14, 2027·4 min read
Trust & SafetyDaylogue Publishes Its Crisis Detection Architecture. No Other Consumer Wellness App Has.
Consumer mental wellness apps process millions of check-ins each year from people in real distress. Almost none of them publish what happens when that distress is detected. Daylogue today published its complete…
LOS ANGELES, CA, May 6, 2027·4 min read
CompanySix Black Friends. Twenty Years. One Mental Wellness App.
Daylogue, the pattern journal that reads your past entries and tells you what it notices, today shared the story behind its team. Founder and CEO Brandon Bibbins built the company's founding team…
LOS ANGELES, CA, May 19, 2027·5 min read
CultureYour Journal Knows You're Burning Out. You're the Last to Find Out.
Daylogue today launched a set of features aimed at a user that most wellness apps have given up on: the early-stage founder who is white-knuckling a launch and has no time, no…
LOS ANGELES, CA, August 19, 2027·5 min read
CultureYou Moved to the City. Your People Are Still Back There. That Gap Doesn't Close.
Americans have been moving at historically lower rates since 2020. The cultural conversation about loneliness has focused largely on the people who stayed. The less-told story belongs to the people who did…
LOS ANGELES, CA, August 19, 2027·4 min read
CultureThe Hidden Tax of Being Different People in Different Rooms
There is a version of you that goes to work. A different version that goes home for the holidays. A third version that shows up at the friend group dinner, and a…
LOS ANGELES, CA, September 8, 2027·8 min read
FeatureThe Meeting Is on Your Calendar. The Dread Has Been in Your Entries for a Week.
Calendar apps know when your one-on-one is scheduled. They don't know that you've written about it, with a specific kind of dread, in four consecutive entries. Daylogue does.
LOS ANGELES, CA, September 9, 2027·3 min read
CultureClass-Switching Is the Code-Switch Nobody Talks About
Code-switching as a concept has been applied primarily to race. The class version runs just as constant.
LOS ANGELES, CA, September 16, 2027·4 min read
CultureQueer People Have Always Kept the Record. Now the Record Reads Back.
Before there was community, there was the journal. Queer people have always written privately — not as a wellness practice but as a necessity, a place to say what couldn't be said…
LOS ANGELES, CA, September 23, 2027·4 min read
CultureGen Z Invented the Vocabulary for Feelings Millennials Didn't Have Words For
The emotional lexicon available to a 24-year-old in 2027 is substantially more precise than what was available to their millennial counterparts at the same age. What researchers haven't fully answered yet is…
LOS ANGELES, CA, September 23, 2027·4 min read
Privacy & TrustMost AI Generates From the Internet. Daylogue's Only Generates From You.
Daylogue today published a detailed technical account of the architectural decisions behind its AI system. Specifically, the choices the company made to build a product where the AI generates only from the…
LOS ANGELES, CA, October 7, 2027·6 min read
CultureGetting Diagnosed at 34 Is Not a Relief. It's a Rewrite.
A late diagnosis is supposed to be the end of a mystery. For the people who receive one in their 30s, 40s, or 50s, it is often the beginning of a slower…
LOS ANGELES, CA, October 7, 2027·4 min read
CulturePerimenopause Gave Women a Decade of Unexplained Feelings. Nobody Kept the Record.
Perimenopause is one of the most common transitions in a woman's life and one of the least documented in the first person. The clinical literature has charts. Women who went through it…
LOS ANGELES, CA, October 18, 2027·4 min read
CultureLosing a Friend in Your 30s Hits Different and Nobody Has Written the Piece
Sometime in your 30s, a friendship that mattered ends. Not with a fight, usually. With a slow disappearance, a last unanswered text, the growing awareness that neither of you is going to…
LOS ANGELES, CA, October 22, 2027·4 min read
CultureAfter Someone Dies, Their Name Stops Getting Said Out Loud. In Daylogue, It Doesn't Have to.
Daylogue today shared something its users have been doing with the app that the company didn't anticipate when it built it: writing about people who are gone. Not as a feature. Not…
LOS ANGELES, CA, November 3, 2027·6 min read
CultureAfter the Military, Nobody Tells You What to Do With the Quiet
The transition from military to civilian life has the most robust support infrastructure of any major life change in the United States. Education benefits, vocational programs, mental health services, transition assistance programs…
LOS ANGELES, CA, November 5, 2027·4 min read
CultureYour Kids Are Fine. Your Parents Are Slipping. And Nobody Is Asking How You Are.
The term "sandwich generation" has been in the vernacular for 40 years. The actual experience — managing aging parents while raising children, working full time, and fitting everything else into the margins…
LOS ANGELES, CA, November 10, 2027·4 min read
CultureAdoptees Have Always Been Asked to Carry Two Stories. Here Is Where They Write the Third.
Adoption stories in American culture follow two recognized scripts: the grateful adoptee, and the adoptee searching for origins. Neither script accounts for the daily interior life that sits between and around those…
LOS ANGELES, CA, November 12, 2027·5 min read
CultureThe Text to Your Dad That Has Been in Drafts for Three Years
Mental health practitioners report that family estrangement has increased significantly in the last decade. Lost in the statistic is the experience that sits between full contact and full cutoff: the draft.
LOS ANGELES, CA, November 17, 2027·4 min read
CultureThe Most Honest Thing You Said Today You Said to Nobody
Every night, millions of people compose a message — to a parent, an ex, a friend they've lost, a boss they resent — write it completely, read it once, and delete it.
LOS ANGELES, CA, January 8, 2028·4 min read
CultureYour Group Chat Is Doing Therapy. Nobody Asked It To.
The group chat is the most underappreciated mental health institution of the last decade. It has no co-pay, no waitlist, and no out-of-network problem. It is also deeply unequal, available only to…
LOS ANGELES, CA, January 12, 2028·9 min read