Team
This project is being run by Patrick Skehan in the context of his studies at Stanford University.
Patrick grew up in Ireland before moving to France, where he founded and ran Nightline France, the largest non-profit organization dedicated to youth mental health in France. After 8 years of working on mental health, he wanted to try out something a little more joyful…which led him to this project!
The central concept is that if we journal daily, then our journals can be turned into fun content. And it might also help us learn some more about ourselves (through Weekly Wrappeds, and other little snippets you’ll have to discover during the experiment…).


Data + Privacy
Patrick will be the only person who has access to your data, which he’ll need to analyze and put through AI tools in order to produce content to send onto you.
Can you trust him with your data? He previously ran the largest student listening service in France, supervising highly sensitive mental health discussions – and advocated nationally for the service’s principles of confidentiality and anonymity – so he takes privacy seriously!
This isn’t a commercial or research project. It’s being run in the context of the Stanford Impact Design Immersion Fellowship, with the sole objective of learning some useful stuff and testing out ideas.
If you’ve any questions, feel free to contact Patrick at: pskehan@stanford.edu
Team
This project is being run by Patrick Skehan in the context of his studies at Stanford University.
Patrick grew up in Ireland before moving to France, where he founded and ran Nightline France, the largest non-profit organization dedicated to youth mental health in France. After 8 years of working on mental health, he wanted to try out something a little more joyful…which led him to this project!
The central concept is that if we journal daily, then our journals can be turned into fun content. And it might also help us learn some more about ourselves (through Weekly Wrappeds, and other little snippets you’ll discover during the experiment…).


Data + Privacy
Patrick will be the only person who has access to your data, which he’ll need to analyze and put through AI tools in order to produce content to send onto you.
Can you trust him with your data? He previously ran the largest student listening service in France, supervising highly sensitive mental health discussions – and advocated nationally for the service’s principles of confidentiality and anonymity – so he takes privacy seriously!
This isn’t a commercial or research project. It’s being run in the context of the Stanford Impact Design Immersion Fellowship, with the sole objective of learning some useful stuff and testing out ideas.
If you’ve any questions, feel free to contact Patrick at: pskehan@stanford.edu
Team
This project is being run by Patrick Skehan in the context of his studies at Stanford University.
Patrick grew up in Ireland before moving to France, where he founded and ran Nightline France, the largest non-profit organization dedicated to youth mental health in France. After 8 years of working on mental health, he wanted to try out something a little more joyful…which led him to this project!
The central concept is that if we journal daily, then our journals can be turned into fun content. And it might also help us learn some more about ourselves (through Weekly Wrappeds, and other little snippets you’ll discover during the experiment…).

Data + Privacy
Patrick and his team will be the only people who have access to your data, which he’ll need to analyze and put through AI tools in order to produce content to send onto you.
Can you trust him with your data? He previously ran the largest student listening service in France, supervising highly sensitive mental health discussions – and advocated nationally for the service’s principles of confidentiality and anonymity – so he takes privacy seriously!
This isn’t a commercial or research project. It’s being run in the context of the Stanford Impact Design Immersion Fellowship, with the sole objective of learning some useful stuff and testing out ideas.
If you’ve any questions, feel free to contact Patrick at: pskehan@stanford.edu