GoalMaker captures your thoughts through Telegram, turns them into tasks, and tells you — with your own data — exactly when you've done enough today.
You open Notion. You create a page. You set up a system. Two days later, the system is abandoned and the anxiety is back. Sound familiar?
A new idea. A Slack message. A thing you remembered in the shower. Every thought becomes a task and they all feel equally urgent.
You push things to tomorrow because today is full. But tomorrow is full too. The list only grows, and with it, the weight on your chest.
Too many things to do, so you do none. Or you do the wrong thing. Or you jump between five things and finish zero.
You rest but it doesn't feel like rest. Because you don't know if you've done enough. You never know. So the loop starts again.
GoalMaker doesn't ask you to organize anything. No folders, no tags, no templates. Just speak your mind on Telegram. It handles the rest.
Message your second brain on Telegram like you'd text a friend. It parses your natural language into structured tasks. No setup. No system to maintain.
Created 18 tasks in a brain-dump? Good. The app shows you only what matters today. Everything else is safely stored — out of your way.
Your data says you complete 5.2 tasks per day. Today you've done 5. One more and you're free. Actually free. The math says so.
Your brain plays three tricks on you every single day. When you context-switch all day, it forgets everything except the last thing — tricking you into feeling like you did nothing. When you do only one thing, the guilt hits. And the admin tasks you keep doing? They drain your energy budget before you ever touch your actual goal.
GoalMaker makes all three visible.
Every evening, GoalMaker shows you what really happened — not what your anxious brain thinks happened.
The reason rest doesn't work is because you never believe you've done enough. GoalMaker replaces that doubt with a number. A clear, honest, data-backed number.
"You don't need another to-do list.
You need to know when to stop."
Interested? Reach out. Let's talk about how your second brain could help you know when you're done.
Get in touch