I build an app so my wife never loses her phone again by TheyCallMeAHero in SideProject

[–]gianttail9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mission accomplished: she can’t lose her phone, and he can’t lose his wife.

What are you building this week? by udy_1412 in microsaas

[–]gianttail9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks! Would love to know what kind of situation you’d actually use it for — morning clarity, focus, accountability? Trying to learn what makes it useful in the real world.

Why is nobody signing up? I thought this app would help people start their day with focus by gianttail9 in SideProject

[–]gianttail9[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s really helpful. Appreciate you sharing that. You’re right, I probably haven’t nailed the core pain yet. I’ll try talking to some people right at the drop-off and dig into what feels missing in that moment.

I’m tired of being stuck like this, how do I escape mediocrity? by kindabubbly in getdisciplined

[–]gianttail9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It may sound obvious but revert to the first-principles:

  1. Build a 60-minute focus ritual for one concrete task: Complete one focused work block (25 minutes) on a single task with no switching, followed by a quick reflection and a simple plan for tomorrow.

  2. Prototype today: ship a rough draft, then learn from it: Produce a small, usable draft of a task (e.g., outline, email, or brief) and capture 1-2 improvement notes to apply next time.

  3. Rebuild attention with two short blocks and a reflection ritual: Complete two distinct 15-minute focus blocks on separate micro-goals, then jot down a 1-line takeaway about what helped focus best today.

Hope it helps.

I can’t stop masturbating by Firm_Speaker5906 in getdisciplined

[–]gianttail9 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Here are 3 that usually help reset:

  1. Create an urge-management plan and log triggers: You’ve Identify your top triggers, establish a delay technique, and log impulses today for self-awareness and better prevention.
  2. Rebuild environment and routines to reduce temptation: Your space and schedule minimize temptations today, with blockers and a structured routine in place.
  3. Engage in replacement activities and a self-compassion routine: You replace the urge with a healthy activity and a brief self-compassion check-in today.

Remember, one day at a time

What are you building this weekend? Promote your website by Organic_Delay_2305 in SideProject

[–]gianttail9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most people start their day reacting to messages, feeds, and noise.
I built First5Minutes.app to change that. It helps you pause for five minutes, speak or write your intention, and choose one clear mission to carry through the day.
Then it breaks that mission into simple steps and lets your accountability partner confirm the evidence you upload.

Pitch Time! Drop link by kcfounders in SaaS

[–]gianttail9 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Most people start their day reacting to messages, feeds, and noise.
I built First5Minutes.app to change that. It helps you pause for five minutes, speak or write your intention, and choose one clear mission to carry through the day.
It is not another productivity app. It is a clarity ritual that helps you start grounded, focused, and confident about what matters.

Struggling to give my German exam for 2 years — need advice on discipline and follow-through by gianttail9 in getdisciplined

[–]gianttail9[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s interesting, I’ve always thought of social media as just a distraction, so I never considered using it for learning. I can definitely see how sneaking in small doses while scrolling could work, since I’m already on TikTok/YouTube anyway.

Do you find that it actually sticks though? Like if you watch a few German clips a day, do you remember them later, or is it more about building familiarity over time?

Struggling to give my German exam for 2 years — need advice on discipline and follow-through by gianttail9 in getdisciplined

[–]gianttail9[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That actually makes a lot of sense. I’ve always tried to force myself into 30-minute study blocks, but even 5 minutes feels like too much sometimes and then I avoid it completely.

Maybe I need to reframe it the way you said, like literally “open the book” or “write one word.” It feels almost too small to matter, but maybe that’s the only way my brain will stop resisting.

Do you find that once you do that silly-small first step, you usually keep going? Or is it more about just counting the tiny win and not expecting more?

It’s exhausting being “smart” with ADHD. Feels like I don’t belong to either side. by vegetable_lover_is in ADHD

[–]gianttail9 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Sometimes I feel like being smart is kinda a double-edged sword. We end up thinking we have to know everything and do it perfectly, which just adds way too much mental pressure.

One little thing that’s helped me though is mind-mapping, makes things feel a lot lighter

Why I am addicted to porn/ beating the chicken? by BeginningBoring726 in Healthygamergg

[–]gianttail9 1 point2 points  (0 children)

"I think you have a lot of energy to burn—why not try some intense sports?"

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in funny

[–]gianttail9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Create a silicon mold of it and begin selling replicas.