Too many steps. Too many decisions. Too many spoons just to get started.
spoonstack handles the executive function overhead so you can show up for the parts that actually need you.
Most productivity apps assume you can just "start." They were built for neurotypical brains with consistent executive function. spoonstack was built for the brain you actually have.
Everything you're carrying in your head about your family — organized, searchable, and ready when you need it.
Every widget knows your family. Every output is specific to your situation. Not a template. The actual thing you needed, ready to use.
AuDHD mom of four. Two working parents. Last week of school. Here's what spoonstack does with all of it.
Pasta with butter (no sauce), plain rice, chicken nuggets (Perdue brand), apples, bananas, plain crackers, peanut butter smooth only, plain pancakes.
Currently dairy-free trial — no butter, cheese, or milk for two weeks. Check in May 22.
Mixed textures, visible seasoning, unexpected sauces, strong smells at the table. strong-smelling foods near Iris anything near his plate.
Separate plate always. Plain pasta, plain bread, fruit pouches, scrambled eggs (no pepper), oatmeal. Food touching siblings' food is a hard stop.
No restrictions. Harriett is vegetarian-curious — let her make that call.
✓ 3-step transition script before any change. Say it once, don't negotiate.
✓ Weather anchor: "check the radar before we leave" — control + familiar thing.
✓ Give him a job at the destination: predictability + purpose.
✓ Minimum 20-minute window for anything unexpected.
⚡ Announcements under 10 minutes — meltdowns cluster here.
⚡ Mixed textures on his plate.
⚡ Loud TV during dinner.
⚡ Being asked to "just" do something.
8th grade has been great. Ms. Okafor is the key relationship — Harriett trusts her. Resource room available daily. Sertraline going well — don't make it a topic.
Mood elevated since Monday. Signs: door slamming, picking at siblings. Usually resolves by Thursday if you don't escalate. She gets dinner choice 2x/week — this matters enormously to her.
CJ is 2 years old. Pediatrician checkup at 9 months in July. Dr. Rivera at Emory Pediatrics.
✓ "I need X done by Y time" via text. Reads the brief every morning.
✓ Concrete, single-action asks. Not "handle it" — "call the school by 3pm about the pickup."
✓ Don't make requests after 8pm. Weekend morning is the best window.
Emergency: Monique: 404-555-0182 · Carlos: 404-555-0194
Iris: Needs plain food, no mixed textures. Give him a specific job to do if he gets dysregulated. The complaint is rarely about the actual thing.
CJ (2): Toddler. Snacks in the blue container in the fridge. Sleeps at 7:30pm, no exceptions.
Violet: Pretty chill. Snacks, tablet time, and a 7:30 bedtime.
Bedtime: 8:30 for Iris and Violet. Harriett manages herself.
spoonstack watches quietly. Then on Sunday mornings it tells you what it found — gently, specifically, with one suggestion at a time.
spoonstack is a web app. Nothing to download. Open it in any browser on any device and it's already there.
spoonstack is in early access. Get in at $79/year and lock that price forever. When it goes to $99, you keep $79. No spam. No pressure. We know you're busy.
You're putting your kids' safe foods, school records, and medication schedules into this app. We take that seriously.