Your Journal Has Been Keeping Secrets From You
Daily check-ins connect across weeks. Daylogue reads across your entries to find the patterns, writes a plain-language summary of what it noticed, and keeps updating as you go. Something no other journal or mood tracker does.
LOS ANGELES, CA, June 10, 2026 / PRNewswire / — 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 get a running explanation of what the app has noticed about them over time. No other journaling or wellness app does this.
Most journal apps just store what you write. They never help you understand it.
You might know some weeks feel harder than others, but you can't explain why. You might remember a fight but forget that it's the same fight you wrote about six weeks ago. The connections that actually explain your patterns stay buried. Most people end up with apps full of entries they never re-read. The writing happened. The understanding never did.
Daylogue's AI does the reading for you. Each check-in, text or voice, gets connected to what came before it. The AI tracks recurring topics across your entries: work stress, a specific relationship, your energy, a loss you're still carrying. When a topic comes back, the AI notices. When you seem to be repeating a pattern you've been through before, the AI tells you. The result is a short, plain-language summary that updates as you go. Something you can actually read and use.
"I built Daylogue because I kept walking into therapy not knowing what happened to me in the last two weeks," said Brandon Bibbins, Founder and CEO of Daylogue. "Whatever I felt that morning was what we'd talk about. The thing I actually needed to work through stayed buried. Daylogue fixes that. It reads what you wrote, tells you what it noticed, and helps you walk into the room already knowing what's been going on."
The new feature launches with:
- A running summary: each new check-in gets connected to what came before, not dropped into a list
- Theme tracking: the AI identifies recurring topics (work stress, a relationship, energy levels, grief) and follows them over time
- Pattern alerts: when a cycle you've been through before starts again, the AI tells you
- Voice or text check-ins: powered by Deepgram voice-to-text. Speak an entry or type it; the AI treats both the same.
- End-to-end encryption on in-app entries: entries written in the Daylogue app are encrypted with AES-256-GCM on your device before upload, so Daylogue cannot read them. SMS and email check-ins, and the AI summaries Daylogue generates, are handled on the server and encrypted at rest. The full privacy map is published on daylogue.io/privacy.
- Chromascape: a visual feature that turns your current emotional pattern into a color palette, a picture to go with the words
"People don't want another place to dump their feelings. They want to understand them," said LaShawn M., Head of Brand and Growth at Daylogue. "Most of us aren't in therapy every week, and even when we are, we can't remember what happened between sessions. Daylogue fills that gap. It tells you what it noticed so you don't have to keep starting from scratch."
Daylogue is live on iOS via the App Store and on the web at daylogue.io. Android is in active development. Access for schools, workplaces, and clinical support teams is available at daylogue.io/enterprise.
About Daylogue
Daylogue is a pattern journal that reads your past entries and detects the emotional patterns running through them. Instead of a stack of separate journal entries, you get a short, plain-language summary that updates over time: what topics keep coming back, when a pattern is repeating, what's shifted in the last few weeks. Daylogue is not therapy and is not a replacement for professional care. It is a private space on your phone for honest reflection, a companion to therapy, to hard conversations, and to the days when you want to know yourself a little better. Entries written inside the Daylogue app are end-to-end encrypted on your device before upload, so Daylogue cannot read them. (SMS and email check-ins, and AI-generated summaries, are handled on the server and are not end-to-end encrypted. See Daylogue's privacy page for the full map.) Founded by Brandon Bibbins, Daylogue is independent and available on iOS and web at daylogue.io.
Media Contact Daylogue hello@daylogue.io daylogue.io
SOURCE Daylogue