Daylogue is a two-minute wellness check-in built for teenagers. Voice or text, whenever they have a moment — between classes, after practice, before bed. Every entry is private and encrypted. Parents, teachers, and coaches never see the words. What they see, with permission, is whether the week is trending up or down.
Built for ages 13 and up
Daylogue is designed for teenagers thirteen and older, with parent consent where required. We follow standard privacy rules for minors and keep content that is not age-appropriate out of the experience. The goal is simple: give teens a tool that respects them, doesn't moralize, and makes emotional self-awareness feel as easy as texting.
Why teens actually use it
- Feels like texting, not homework. Conversational check-ins. The AI asks and they respond naturally. No forms, no prompts to overthink.
- Actually private. End-to-end encrypted. Not even we can read what they write. Parents and schools never see the text of a check-in.
- No streaks, no guilt. Miss a week and nothing nags. Come back whenever. Daylogue meets teens where they are.
- Crisis-aware, not crisis-obsessed. If a check-in surfaces something serious, Daylogue points them toward real help (988, Crisis Text Line, trusted adults) without being preachy or alarmist.
For parents
You want to know your teen is okay. They want space. Daylogue gives you both. Parents never read check-ins. What you can see — only if your teen opts in — is a light signal: are the trends healthy, or is something off? No surveillance. No screenshots. No AI reporting on their private thoughts. The goal is to keep the door open, not to spy.
Teens deserve privacy. Parents deserve peace of mind. Daylogue is built around the idea that those two things are compatible, not opposed.
For schools and sports programs
Schools, middle and high school sports teams, and youth programs can run Daylogue as an opt-in wellness tool for students. Administrators see aggregate trends only — never individual entries — and only when at least five students have checked in, so no one can be identified. It is a way to understand how a group is doing without putting anyone on the spot.
If you run a wellness program for students, you can start a free 30-day pilot and see how it fits.
Not a replacement for real support
Daylogue is a self-awareness tool, not therapy. If a teenager is struggling, please reach out to a trusted adult, a school counselor, or call 988 (the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline). Daylogue can sit alongside real support — it is not a substitute for it.
Start with one check-in today. Two minutes. A private place to notice what is going on.