TimePeace is a calm life diary for parents in the thick of it: catch a milestone, a meltdown, a dinner that worked or a friend finally seen in fifteen one-handed seconds, and the year stops slipping past unrecorded. It keeps the parent’s own life — not a baby-tracker — privately, on your device, free.
No — and that’s the point. TimePeace keeps your life, the parent’s: the milestones you’d hate to forget, the day that actually happened, the friend you finally called. It doesn’t want feed times and sleep schedules; it wants the year you’re living, kept so you can look back on it.
Not much. An entry is fifteen seconds, one-handed, while the kettle boils. The day threads itself together from a line or two, and a missed day is just a quieter page — nothing nags, nothing resets.
That’s the job. The nursery’s odd days, the party you’re invited to, the birthday, the person you mean to call — kept in your private diary so the mental load isn’t living entirely in your head, and nothing is shared with anyone.
The hardest part isn’t the logistics — it’s that the years vanish while you’re managing them. TimePeace keeps the small moments as they pass, so the year your child grew is a record you can re-read, not a blur you mourn.