Say the messy thought before it disappears. KeptMind turns it into a clear next step and nudges only when it matters.
An ADHD reminder app has to solve one problem most reminder apps ignore: notification blindness. A single push that you swipe away without registering is not a reminder. KeptMind escalates only the tasks you mark critical — push first, then SMS, then a phone call — so the important things break through while everything else stays quiet. Reminders are created by voice in seconds and respect the energy you actually have that day.
A standard reminder fires once, looks identical to every other notification, and gets dismissed in the same reflexive swipe. For an ADHD brain mid-task, that single ping carries no weight — it is gone before it registers.
KeptMind treats reminders as a ladder, not a single event. The first nudge is a quiet push. If a critical task is still not done, it escalates to SMS, and finally to an actual phone call. The escalation is what converts a reminder from background noise into something you cannot ignore.
Most reminders never leave the push tier. You flag only the genuine must-dos — medication, a deposit, picking someone up — as critical, and those are the only ones that earn SMS or a call. This keeps the loud channels meaningful instead of training you to mute everything.
Recurring reminders for meds, hydration, or weekly commitments work natively and still respect energy filtering, so a bad day does not bury the one repeat that actually matters.
You create a reminder by speaking it — "call the pharmacy tomorrow morning, this is important" — and KeptMind sets the time and the critical flag from how you said it. There is no form, no menu diving, no choosing a notification sound.
Reminders land in the same energy-aware Today list as everything else, so what you are reminded of is also filtered by the capacity you have, not just the clock.