Talk to a decade
of your own writing.
Years of journals, voice memos, and reflections — turned into a private Living Memory Graph you can search, ask questions of, and revisit any time.
What you're up against today
Years of entries, zero retrieval
Your archive is precious, but nobody can actually read a decade of journals to remember what they were thinking last March.
Scattered across apps
Some in Day One, some in Notes, some in Notion, some in voice memos. The whole story never assembles.
Patterns stay invisible
Recurring themes — anxieties, relationships, creative cycles — only become obvious when something surfaces them.
AI tools want your data
Most assistants train on what you share. Your inner life shouldn't be training fuel.
What Shaterian gives you
Ask your past self anything
‘When did I start feeling this way?’ — Shaterian surfaces the actual entries that answer.
Themes you didn't know you had
Recurring people, places, and emotional patterns assembled across your full archive.
Weekly reflections that feel earned
Not generic prompts — reflections drawn directly from what you wrote and lived.
Private by design
Your archive is yours. Not training data, not a product, not for sale.
What people want to know
Can I import my existing journals?
Yes — text journals, voice memos, and Day One-style entries can be imported into your Living Memory Graph.
What can I actually ask?
Anything from 'What was I worried about last spring?' to 'Show me every time I mentioned my brother.' Shaterian retrieves the actual entries that match.
Does it train on my data?
No. Your archive is private and is not used to train shared models.
Will my journals stay mine?
Always. You own your data, you choose what to share, and you can export or delete anything at any time.
Be among the first 500 founding members
Early access, and a direct line to the team.