boredable won't turn you into a productivity guru. It just gives your brain a pretty little box to dump things into so you can stop spiraling at 2am.
Yes, it's actually free. No, we're not lying.You've got 14 notes titled "stuff" and a screenshot of a recipe you'll never make. We can do better than this. Probably.
Shopping lists, workout plans, book wishlists, that one recipe your coworker mentioned in passing 6 months ago... if your brain grabbed it, boredable holds it hostage for you.
Text, numbers, dates — define exactly what info each item needs. It's like building a tiny database except fun and you don't need a CS degree. Just vibes.
Every field you create becomes a filter. Sort by store, price, date, or "that thing I saw at 3am." It's your brain's search engine, but one that actually works.
Shopping? Recipes? "Things I impulsively bought and need to justify"? Name it, slap a color on it, pick a cute icon. Congrats, you're organizing.
Need a "where did I even see this" column? A "would I buy this again after crying" rating? Build whatever unhinged format your brain wants. Zero judgment.
Add items when you remember them (so, at 2am). Filter and search when you need them (so, in the store, panicking). It's the circle of ADHD life.
*by "people" we mean like three friends and a very supportive mom
I used to write shopping lists on my hand. Then I'd wash my hands and stand in the cereal aisle having a full existential crisis. boredable ended that era.
My therapist said I need systems. I said I need something that won't bore me to death in 3 days. Somehow this app is still on my phone. Suspicious.
I opened the app to add milk and accidentally organized my entire life. I now have a category called 'Snacks I Deserve.' I'm thriving.
It's free, it takes 30 seconds to set up, and it won't ghost you like every other app you've downloaded.
Fine, I'll try itNo credit card. No spam. No guilt trips. Pinky promise.