Who this is for
Anyone who wants a written record of life's good moments, not just a camera roll they never scroll back through.
The moment this saves you
I have a perfect evening with friends, take a few photos, and a year later the photos are there but the actual feeling and the things we said, the stuff that made it special, are completely gone.
See it work
Messy spoken thought in. A clean, structured artifact out.
Want to remember tonight. We had everyone over for dinner, the whole old crew, first time all together in like three years. The moment that got me was when we were all crammed around the too-small table and someone started telling the story about the camping trip that went wrong and everyone was crying laughing, even though we've all heard it a hundred times. Maya brought her new baby and passing her around the table felt like something. I just had this wave of, these are my people, and I don't say that enough. The food was a disaster honestly, the chicken was raw, but nobody cared.
Memory, June 5, 2026
Had everyone over for dinner tonight, the whole old crew, first time all together in about three years.
The moment that got me: all of us crammed around the too-small table while someone retold the story about the camping trip that went wrong, and everyone crying laughing even though we've heard it a hundred times.
Maya brought her new baby and passing her around the table felt like something.
I had this wave of, these are my people, and I don't say that enough. The food was a disaster, the chicken was raw, but nobody cared.
The workflow
Record a voice note
Hit the hotkey and talk, no formatting, no typing.
Tag it with this context
Contextli shapes your words into the structured output above.
Find it later
Everything's searchable and organised by context.
Pull it into Claude or ChatGPT
Bring your contexts straight into your AI tools with the Contextli MCP.
Your raw recording and transcription stay on your device, so you can always go back to the original.
The prompt behind this context
I'm going to narrate a moment I want to remember. Turn it into a dated memory entry: a bold "Memory, [today's date]" heading, then a few short first-person paragraphs in MY voice, preserving the specific sensory details, who was there, anything said, and the feeling I name. Keep the small imperfect details (they're what makes it real). Tidy the rambling but don't polish away my voice or sentiment. Don't invent people or events I didn't mention. Output only the entry.
Make it your own. This is a starting point. Once it's in Contextli, tweak the instructions so the output comes out exactly how you like it.
Use this context
One tap adds it to your clipboard. Open Contextli and paste to add it.
Next, open Contextli, Contexts, Import, paste.
Make it your own. This is a starting point. Once it's in Contextli, tweak the instructions so the output comes out exactly how you like it.
Your raw recording and transcription stay on your device, so you can always go back to the original.
Related contexts
Daily Journal
It's 11pm and a blank page feels like a chore, so you skip it again. Instead, just talk the way you'd process the day in your head. You'll wake up to a warm, honest entry in your own voice, not a transcript.
Travel Log
You took four hundred photos and wrote zero words, so a year on the trip is just a blur. At the end of the day, narrate it out loud, the wrong turn that became the best part, the tiny restaurant, and keep a journal you'll treasure.
Gratitude Log
Gratitude works, but writing it out kills the habit by day four. Just say the three things out loud, the good coffee, the text from a friend, whatever. Twenty seconds, and you've got a dated list you'll actually want to reread.