Echo is a voice journal that listens.
Open the app. Tap one button. Speak.
That's it. No mood pickers. No templates. No prompt menus or gratitude checklists waiting at the top of a blank page. You just talk — about your day, a frustration, a half-formed idea, a small win — and Echo listens.
A few seconds later, your words come back to you as a journal entry. Organized, lightly cleaned, shaped into something readable. But the words are still yours. The ideas are still yours. Echo doesn't ghostwrite. It edits.
Your words, never invented.
This is the core promise. When you read your entry, you should recognize yourself in it — the phrases you actually used, the things you actually said. Echo's job is to be a thoughtful editor: pulling out the through-line, quoting the most evocative line you spoke, organizing your scattered thoughts into something you'd want to read again. Not to dress up your voice as someone else's prose.
Formats that adapt to you.
Some entries are reflections. Some are vents. Some are gratitudes, wins, or genuinely free-form. Echo figures out which one you just gave it and formats accordingly:
— A reflection becomes a flowing piece, opening with a quoted line from your own words.
— A vent is held quietly. No advice, no analysis. Just your words, kept.
— A gratitude is a short list of what you actually appreciated — only as many things as you mentioned.
— A win is acknowledged without being oversold.
You don't tell Echo what kind of entry this is. It listens, then chooses.
Echo noticed.
Once you've built a few entries, Echo begins to notice things — quietly, without lecturing. A name that keeps coming up. A theme. A pattern in how your Sunday nights tend to go. These observations sit at the foot of your entries, clearly attributed to Echo, never disguised as your own thoughts.
Privacy by design.
No data sales. No training on your words. No ads.
For people who think in sentences.
Echo isn't a mood tracker, a wellness coach, or a productivity tool. It's closer to a beautifully made notebook with a thoughtful editor on the other side of the page. If you've ever wished you journaled more but found typing it out exhausting — or if you talk to yourself in the car and think this should be somewhere — Echo is for you.