Mobility
How you get around, and what happens if your main mode fails — car trouble, transit strike, weather, remote-work access.
Find the thin places in your day
A private routine-diagnostic. Describe a typical day in plain words and get a fragility map across six life domains — with each hidden single point of failure named specifically and one calm, low-cost reframe attached.
Three steps. Under a minute. No account, no email, no server.
A paragraph is enough. What do you do, where do you go, what do you rely on? Plain words beat perfect words.
Your day is read across mobility, food, information, relationships, money, and work. Each domain is scored 1–5 for fragility. Thin places are named specifically — not in generic advice.
Every flagged point comes with one calm, low-cost suggestion. No bunker lists. No paranoia. Usually a habit, sometimes a 5-minute setup.
They cover the major systems an average day touches. Each one is read in plain language from what you type.
How you get around, and what happens if your main mode fails — car trouble, transit strike, weather, remote-work access.
Where meals come from, how often, and what's actually in the pantry. Single-store dependence shows up here.
Where the news comes from, who shapes what you believe, how many truly independent sources feed the picture.
Who you'd actually call at 2am. How many people could really show up. The size of the real circle, not the contacts list.
Income, savings, debt, and the gap between them. The number of income lines, not the size of any one.
The job, the boss, the network, the next move, the portability of the skill.
The same analysis, run on a paragraph that sounds like a lot of weeks.
A typical weekday for me: I drive 40 minutes alone to the office. I grab coffee at the same café every morning. I get my news from one podcast and Twitter. I talk to my partner and my mom most weeks. My salary covers rent but I have no savings. I have one close friend I'd actually call at 2am.
Every few years the news rediscovers what every generation eventually learns: the systems we rely on are quieter and more brittle than they appear. Fuel, food, information, relationships, money, work — none of them are as redundant as we assume on a calm Tuesday.
This tool isn't a response to today's headlines. It's a way to look at something that's been true for a long time, in a way that doesn't sell you either calm or panic.
The point isn't to be afraid. The point is to know.
The point isn't to be afraid. The point is to know — and then to take the smallest non-paranoid step that makes your day slightly less thin.
Takes a minute. Stays in your browser. Worth re-running after any major change.