You plan. You set goals. You still don't do it.
The problem isn't your system. It's drift.
“Planning feels like progress. It isn't.”
Action precedes identity change — not the other way around.
“You already know what to do. You just don't do it.”
The gap isn't knowledge. It's regulation.
“Progress isn't about holding on. It's about coming back.”
Relapse is part of change, not a failure state.
“When you lose yourself, you don't need a plan. You need an anchor.”
One focus. Not twenty open tasks.
“Not everything matters equally. There's always a tipping point.”
Attention is limited. Losing focus is normal.
“Motivation follows action, not the other way around.”
Small concrete steps lower psychological resistance.
What remid is not
No streaks.
No gamification.
No artificial pressure.
No optimization promises.
No to-do lists that crush you.
Classic apps
- Organize tasks
- Rely on planning
- Measure completion
- Motivate through rewards
- Create pressure through gaps
“If you plan it well, you'll do it.”
remid
- Doesn't organize — focuses
- Replaces planning with action
- Measures drift and return, not completion
- Relies on clarity, not motivation
- Accepts interruption as reality
“You already know enough. Get back to doing.”
Remid is not an app that tells you what to do.
It's the app that makes visible whether you do it.
A focus recovery system.
For people who already know — but don't act.
Not a planner. A return point.
Stop managing. Start doing.
The goal
You won't need this app someday.
And that's exactly the point.
Remid doesn't sell a product.
It sells an uncomfortable truth that feels right:
You don't need more control.
You need honesty about your actions.
Free. No credit card. No tricks.