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Wall planner

Small wins we can see.

Print this, put it on the wall or desk, and tick the smallest true box. No streaks, no catch-up debt, no feeling behind. We just come back to the next small thing.

Audio

Listen to the wall planner guide

Choose an English-accented voice and press play. This is prebuilt AI-generated audio stored with the site, so it does not need to generate a voice each time you visit.

Voice

This audio is AI-generated, not a recording of a real person.

Selected: Female English voice

Go to lesson 0

First Steps With AI

My wall planner

Every tick is evidence. Even opening the page counts.

Step Listen Try Paper Done
0. I started
1. I asked one question
2. I used voice or dictation
3. I made a shopping helper
4. I kept things in one place
5. I added my rules
6. I decided what good looks like
7. I tried it somewhere else

Today's one thing

Only one thing. Smaller is better.

Not now

Put distractions here so they do not steal the session.

I got stuck here

A stuck point is useful information, not a mark against you.

Proof I did it

Photo, printed page, list, note, or tick.

Why this exists

Some learners need progress to be visible outside the screen.

For people with ADHD, anxiety, low confidence, memory issues, or a long history of feeling bad at computers, a wall chart is not decoration. It is a second brain, a prompt, and a record that something did happen.

Use it gently

  • No missed-day marks.
  • No long task lists.
  • No punishment for restarting.
  • One visible next step.
  • One small tick at a time.