Viewing your history
The Calendar shows every Entry laid out by day so you can scan a week, month, or year of tracking at a glance.
The Calendar at /calendar is the chronological view of everything you've logged. Where the Chat board is your latest feed and the Dashboard is your aggregates, the Calendar is your history — pick any day, see exactly what you tracked.
What you'll see
A month grid by default. Each day shows:
- Activity indicators for every Type or Routine you logged that day (dots, emoji, or chips depending on density)
- A total count of Entries logged
Tap a day to see the full list of Entries for that date.
What it's useful for
Reviewing a week. Scan the last seven days to see which habits stayed on track and which slipped.
Catching missing data. Empty days are obvious. If you meant to log every day and there's a gap on Wednesday, you can spot it.
Reading old context. Tap May 14 to read the diary entry you wrote that morning, see the workout you logged that evening, and the mood reading from bedtime — all in one place.
Planning forward. Future dates show Routines with a Cadence as upcoming reminders (when Cadence is enabled — see Roadmap).
Per-day detail
Tap any day to see:
- Every Entry logged that day, in time order
- Every Routine log with its child rows expanded
- Quick links to open or edit any Entry
This is the right surface for "what was I doing two Tuesdays ago?"
A worked review
A weekly self-review using the Calendar:
- Open
/calendaron Sunday evening. - Scan the last seven days — note which Types appear every day and which have gaps.
- Tap into days with notable activity (a heavy workout, a long deep-work session, a missed habit) to read the details.
- Spot patterns: did the rough Wednesday show up in mood and sleep? Did the heavy Saturday workout correlate with better sleep that night?
This kind of review is why the Calendar exists alongside the Dashboard — aggregates show trends, the Calendar shows days.
Filtering (coming soon)
Future versions will let you filter the Calendar by Type, Routine, or tag — so you can see, for example, only your workouts laid out across the month, or only your meditation streak.
Next
- Reading your Dashboard — aggregates and trends across all your data
- Logging an entry — add more entries to populate your Calendar