Mood check
Which of these feels closest to what you’re feeling right now? Tap a
card to open a short reflection. Only one card stays open at a time;
tap it again to close.
Overwhelmed
Tap to open reflection
Overwhelmed often means your mind is stacking
every task, worry, and “should” at once. It is less about
weakness than about capacity running hot.
Example: You stare at your messages, deadlines,
and chores and feel frozen because starting anywhere feels like
choosing the wrong thing.
Try paced breathing
Write in the journal
Numb or shut down
Tap to open reflection
Numbness can be a protective slow-down: feelings
tuck away when they would otherwise flood you. It can feel blank,
flat, or “not here.”
Example: Someone asks how you are and you answer
“fine” while noticing you do not actually feel much of anything.
Gentle breath rhythm
Journal one true line
Anxious or on edge
Tap to open reflection
Anxiety can show up as a tight chest, racing
thoughts, or a sense that something bad is about to happen even
when you cannot name it.
Example: You replay a conversation and your body
acts like the moment is still happening.
Use the breathing circle
Name it in the journal
Irritable or frustrated
Tap to open reflection
Irritability can be anger with nowhere safe to
land, or exhaustion wearing a sharp edge. Small things feel like
too much.
Example: A noisy room or a delayed reply makes
you snap, then you feel guilty for snapping.
Slow the breath first
Journal what triggered you
Heavy with grief
Tap to open reflection
Grief is love with nowhere to go after a loss.
It can feel like waves, fog, or a weight that does not need a
“reason” to be valid.
Example: A song or date on the calendar hits and
the ache returns fresh, even after time has passed.
Steady breathing
Write to who or what you miss
Hopeful but depleted
Tap to open reflection
This mix means you still care about tomorrow, but your body is
running on fumes. Hope and fatigue
can coexist.
Example: You make plans you believe in, then
dread the energy it will take to show up.
Short breath reset
Note what still matters
Lonely or unseen
Tap to open reflection
Guilty or self-critical
Tap to open reflection
Restless or wired
Tap to open reflection
Calm and grounded
Tap to open reflection
Calm does not mean perfect—it means enough
space to notice your breath, your surroundings, and your next
choice without panic.
Example: A problem still exists, but your
shoulders drop and you can think in full sentences.
Deepen the steadiness
Capture what helped today
Open full journal
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