Some days drain you before noon. Others carry you long past midnight. Most people never see the pattern. Three times a day, a quiet check in appears. Morning. Afternoon. Evening. One slider. Five states. Battery empty. Fading ember. Steady. Charged. Full voltage. Three seconds and you are back to your life. Then the picture starts forming. After two weeks, your rhythm appears as a living heatmap. Rows of days. Columns of moments. Pale grey mornings beside bright electric evenings. Tuesday carries you. Friday nights sink lower than expected. The pattern is suddenly impossible to ignore. No long journaling sessions. No watch strapped to your wrist. No medical score pretending to know you better than you know yourself. Just observation. Tap any square and the whole day opens up at once. A week view smooths the noise into three steady bands for morning, afternoon, and evening averages. Under the map, short insights surface naturally. Your strongest mornings. Your slowest evenings. Your weekly baseline. And when you want the raw numbers, copy everything as text with a single tap. It keeps working deep in a subway tunnel, on a late flight, or miles past the last cell tower. The record stays intact until you are back. The colors do the talking. Grey to vivid light. Nothing decorative. Nothing accidental. Over time, the app becomes less like a tracker and more like a mirror you actually trust. Use it for two weeks. See what your days have been trying to tell you.