A gratitude journal that gives context to what you're grateful for
Gratitude isn't a feeling you summon on command — it's a practice of attention. idazery is where what you appreciate sits alongside what you wrote about your day, your mood and your plans.
- Gratitude in Context, Not Isolation
- AES-256 Encrypted
- No Installation Needed
The gratitude journal that stops working
Not because gratitude doesn't work — because the way it's usually practiced strips out the part that makes it work.
Three points a day, repeated until they mean nothing
The same mechanical list, written out of habit rather than attention, loses its effect after a few weeks.
An isolated list has no context
You don't know what happened that day, how you felt, or what was going on — just three lines, floating with nothing around them.
Without context, gratitude turns abstract
“My health, my family, my work” are the same three things every day, and they stop meaning anything specific.
A list doesn't read back the same way an entry does
Rereading a gratitude list months later doesn't bring back the day the way rereading a full entry does.
Sound familiar? idazery brings it all together: here's how
Gratitude, with context
idazery doesn't change what happens — it changes what you see of what happens.
Today's gratitude, next to today itself
The day's entry, your mood and what you're grateful for, all in the same timeline — not three separate apps.
What you appreciate has a story behind it
Not just an item on a list — something with the rest of the day still attached to it when you read it back.
Built around how gratitude actually works
Not three boxes to fill in every morning: the specific moments where noticing something good actually sticks.
Daily gratitude, in context
Not three points in a separate app: a line or a paragraph at the end of the day's entry, next to what actually happened. The context is what makes it specific instead of generic. See what you actually gain from writing a diary.
Noticing what usually goes unnoticed
The things most worth being grateful for happen in the background: a conversation that went well, a quiet moment, something that worked without a problem. If it isn't written down, it isn't noticed. See how writing something down changes how you think about it.
Mood tracking alongside gratitude
See how your mood evolves alongside the gratitude practice — not to prove cause and effect, just to have perspective on your own emotional cycles. More on the mood tracker app.
Looking back at what was good
Rereading entries from three months ago isn't just seeing what you wrote — it's seeing what was good then, that you may not have fully noticed at the time. See how to actually feel progress.
Everything a gratitude journal actually needs
Built into the same diary you already write in — not a separate app with its own three boxes to fill in.
Daily timeline
Gratitude in the same space as the day's entry, not in a separate app.
Mood tracking
Emotional tracking alongside the gratitude practice. Pro plan.
Topics
A dedicated Topic for gratitude, if you'd rather keep it separate from the rest of your diary.
Writing heatmap
See the consistency of the practice over time.
Year in Pixels
See the whole year of entries at a glance, gratitude included. Pro plan.
Real privacy
AES-256 encryption. What you appreciate, and what you write about it, stays private.
Access from any device
Today's gratitude, from your phone, right before you fall asleep.
Specific gratitude works. Generic gratitude doesn't.
“My health” is generic — it has no cumulative effect, because it's the same sentence every day. “That the 10am meeting went better than I expected” is specific — it's real, and it's memorable when you read it back. The specificity comes from context, and the context comes from writing about the day, not just about the gratitude.
What you appreciate in private stays private
What you're grateful for about people, about quiet moments, about what actually matters to you — that's especially personal. Everything in idazery is protected with AES-256 encryption, there's no ad network, and nothing you write is used to train AI models.