

Yeah exactly — that’s pretty much the pattern I kept falling into too.
“Texting myself” works, but it still feels like you’re bending a tool to do something it wasn’t really designed for.
What I was trying to fix was that exact moment before that — when something appears and you either capture it instantly… or lose it.
So instead of choosing the tool each time, I tried to make the entry point always the same, and push the “what is this?” decision later.
Curious if that resonates with how you use it day-to-day.
That’s a really good way to frame it.
I kept coming back to the idea that the “act” shouldn’t be something new you have to learn — it should reuse what you’re already doing in each context.
So instead of one single physical gesture, it’s more like a single intent expressed through different native actions:
The key (for me) wasn’t forcing one gesture, but making all of those feel like the same action underneath.
So the mental model becomes: “this goes into my inbox”, regardless of how I triggered it.
That’s where things started to click for me.