A private reflection planner

Write down what happened before the story in your head takes over.

Arguments repeat because no one writes down what actually happened, what triggered it, or what each person needs to feel better. This planner gives you a quiet place to do that. Entries stay on your device and can be printed whenever you want a paper copy.

New Postmortem Entry

1 What happened?

Describe the event in plain words. Stick to what a camera would have seen and heard.

2 Each person's perspective

Write what each person might have been thinking or needing. Use "I" statements where you can.

3 Emotional triggers

What set things off? Triggers are often older than the current argument.

4 What helped and what hurt?
5 One next step

Pick one small, concrete thing you want to try next time.

How to get the most out of this planner

Last updated 2026, version 1.2

When to fill it out

Wait until you are calm enough to write in full sentences. If your heart is still racing, take a walk first. The planner works best within a day or two, while the memory is fresh but the sting has faded.

Try a three-person view

If more than two people were involved, add their perspective as a rough sketch. You do not need perfect quotes. Capture the need or fear you think they were carrying. This is not about agreeing with them. It is about seeing the whole picture.

Watch for repeat triggers

After four or five entries, read the trigger section across all of them. Look for phrases like "feeling rushed," "feeling corrected," or "being interrupted." Repeat triggers point to a boundary or need that deserves a direct conversation, not another argument.

Common mistakes

  • Writing during the argument. You will focus on winning, not understanding.
  • Skipping the next step. A postmortem without a next step is just a complaint log.
  • Using labels like "always" and "never." Replace them with the actual number of times it happened this month.
  • Forgetting to print or export. Local storage is not a backup. If the entry matters, make a copy.

A short scenario

Two siblings argue about who visits their parent more often. The argument ends with one of them leaving early. Later that week, the other sibling opens the planner. In the "what happened" section, they write the visit schedule, not the insult. In the perspective section, they write that they feel guilty and assume the sibling is angry about that guilt. The trigger turns out to be a parent's offhand comment from the month before. The next step becomes: talk to the sibling about the comment before the next visit, not about the visit itself.

What this planner does not do

It does not decide who was right. It does not replace a therapist. It does not send your words to anyone. It is a mirror, not a judge. If reading past entries makes you feel stuck or ashamed, that is a sign to talk to someone you trust or a counselor.

Why write it down at all?

Memory edits itself. After a few days, you remember the sharp comment and forget the tired sigh that came before it. Writing slows the story down. Seeing the same trigger three times on paper is harder than brushing it off in your head. A written next step is easier to keep than a vague promise to "do better." This planner is private, so you can be specific without worrying about who might read it.