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Nobody Read Your Week Back to You. Daylogue Does It Every Sunday.

The weekly narrative summary is three paragraphs of plain language. It tells you what you were actually carrying, not what was on your to-do list.

Daylogue PressLOS ANGELES, CA, January 7, 2027 · 3 min read

LOS ANGELES, CA, January 7, 2027 / PRNewswire / The Sunday night feeling has a name, a product category, and a treatment protocol. What it has rarely had is a reader.

Something that looked at the actual week — not the calendar, not the project tracker, not the self-assessment you give yourself while trying to fall asleep — and said, in plain language, here is what was going on for you. Not what you did. What you were carrying. The distinction matters more than most apps acknowledge.

Daylogue's weekly narrative summary does that. Every Sunday, the app generates three paragraphs from a user's entries across the previous seven days: what kept coming up, what the emotional register was, what shifted and what stayed the same. It doesn't grade the week or suggest how to improve the next one. It just reads the week back, accurately, in the same register the user wrote it in — which turns out to be a more useful mirror than most people expect.

"She didn't know she had a good week until she read what she'd been writing about," said Brandon Bibbins, Founder and CEO of Daylogue.

The weekly summary is often the first moment users realize the pattern journal is working. Not because it says anything they couldn't have said themselves, but because it says something accurate about a week they thought they'd already processed and closed. The entries were written in pieces, over seven days, in different moods and different contexts. The summary is the first time those pieces appear as a single coherent thing.

Three paragraphs. Plain language. What you were actually carrying. Available on iOS and web for Daylogue premium users every Sunday.

"She didn't know she had a good week until she read what she'd been writing about." — Brandon Bibbins, Founder and CEO, Daylogue

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How does the weekly summary know what to say?

The summary is generated from a user's own entries across the seven-day window. The pattern engine identifies the topics that kept returning, the emotional register of the entries, and any notable shifts. The output is written in plain language and reflects the user's own writing back to them in a synthesized form.

Q: Is the weekly summary always accurate?

It reflects what you wrote. If you wrote about one thing all week and were also preoccupied by something you didn't write about, the summary will reflect the former and not the latter. That gap — between what the summary says and what was actually going on — is sometimes its own information.

Q: Can I share my weekly summary?

Yes. The summary is shareable as text. Some users share it with their therapist before sessions. Some keep it private. Some export it for their own records. Daylogue does not share your summary with anyone without your explicit action.

Q: Is the weekly summary a premium feature?

Yes. AI-generated weekly narrative summaries are available on premium. Free users can read their own entries and see themes, but the automatically generated weekly summary is a premium feature.

Q: Does missing days affect the summary?

Not significantly. If a user wrote five entries in a given week, the summary reflects those five. Missing days don't result in a gap or a judgment — just a summary based on what was there.

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

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