Say the messy thought before it disappears. KeptMind turns it into a clear next step and nudges only when it matters.
An AI task planner uses AI to do the work you would otherwise skip: turning a messy list of intentions into a structured, prioritized plan. KeptMind parses voice or text captures into tasks, suggests priority and energy fit, can split a daunting task into a handful of micro-steps, and on a higher-energy day will draft a flexible plan that works around your calendar. You stay in control — the AI proposes, you adjust.
The planning tax — sitting down to decide what to do and in what order — is exactly the executive-function work that ADHD makes expensive, so it gets deferred until Monday lunchtime or never. An AI planner removes that tax by doing the first draft for you.
KeptMind drafts a day from your existing tasks, your calendar busy state, and your stated energy. It is a starting point you edit, not a rigid schedule that breaks the moment real life intervenes.
A task like "sort out taxes" is a wall, not a step. The AI split feature breaks one overwhelming item into three to six concrete micro-steps so there is always an obvious next action. The original capture stays intact; the split just adds clarity.
Because the planner knows each task's energy fit, it surfaces low-effort steps on low-energy days and saves the demanding work for when you actually have the capacity.
Every AI suggestion — the parsed task, the priority, the split, the drafted plan — is shown for review before it commits. You confirm or adjust with a tap. The point is to remove the blank-page paralysis, not to hand control to an algorithm.
Calendar sync is optional and one-directional by default: externalize first, time-box second when executive function returns. The planner works fully without ever connecting a calendar.