One page, because I was tired of seven apps.
tadoy started with a rough month. A bout of food poisoning in Thailand wrecked my gut, and putting it back together meant actually paying attention — watching what I ate, staying on top of the medications and probiotics I was taking, noticing how my body was doing, tracking the ordinary, unglamorous things most people don't talk about, down to the bathroom.
tadoy became my way to monitor my mind, body and soul.
The problem was never finding an app for any one of those. The problem was finding an app for all of them. A food log here, a body tracker there, a separate app for mood, another just for my meds — each one its own download, its own login, its own subscription, its own little stream of notifications asking for my attention. I didn't want seven apps and seven paywalls just to look after one life. I wanted one quiet page.
So I built it. tadoy began as the page I wished existed — somewhere private, on my own device, where all of it could sit together without selling me anything or shipping my day off to a server.
Then something I didn't expect happened. Once the page existed, I kept adding the things I actually loved. The gym. A few minutes of meditation in the morning. A line from what I read. The countdowns to the dates I was walking toward. None of them needed a new app — they just became part of the same page.
That's what tadoy is. Not seven loud apps fighting over your day, but one quiet page that holds it — the practical, the reflective, and whatever you live by. Private by default, because it's your life, not data.