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How It Works

A calmer way
to remember.

Room Memory turns scattered thoughts, reminders, details, and decisions into a living map of your home — organized by where life actually happens.

Start your Room Memory Map
1
Capture → Kitchen
2
Map → Bathroom
3
Remember → Bedroom
4
Retrieve → Entryway
5
Put Down → ✓
The process

Simple steps.
Lasting clarity.

01
Capture

Add it as it happens.

Add a note, photo, voice memo, product, preference, reminder, link, or decision in seconds. No category selection required — just put it down.

Examples

Guest towels are in the hall closet.
The lavender detergent caused irritation.
Air filter size: 20×20×1.
02
Map

SOEHA places it in the right room.

SOEHA interprets the room, type, timing, person, goal, and context — then places the memory where it belongs. No manual filing, no categories to manage.

Examples

Saved to Kitchen → Groceries.
Saved to Bathroom → Sensitivities.
Saved to Bedroom → Supplies.
03
Remember

The room holds it safely.

Once placed, the memory belongs to the room — not your mental load. The kitchen is holding this. The bathroom is holding this. You can set it down.

Examples

"The kitchen is holding this."
"The bedroom has this."
"The bathroom holds 4 things."
04
Retrieve

Find it when you need it.

Ask SOEHA or enter a room to find what you need — without searching through your brain. SOEHA resurfaces what matters based on room, time, pattern, or question.

Examples

Which melatonin brand worked?
What do we need before hosting?
Where is the extra phone charger?
05
Put Down

Release what is no longer needed.

When something is complete, resolved, or no longer needed, put it down. Complete, release, archive, or turn it into a pattern. The home updates. You move on.

Examples

Returned the package.
Found a new brand that works.
The routine is now automatic.
Memory types

Not just where things are.
What works. What not to repeat.

Object Memory

Where something lives, belongs, or needs to move.

Preference Memory

The brands, settings, products, and choices that already worked.

Allergy & Sensitivity Notes

Ingredients, products, materials, and conditions to avoid.

Decision Memory

What you already learned, so you do not decide from scratch again.

Routine Memory

What supports mornings, evenings, hosting, travel, care, and reset.

Pattern Memory

What keeps repeating across rooms, days, and seasons.

Goal Support Memory

The choices that support the life you are trying to build.

Transition Cues

What needs to come back before leaving, arriving, hosting, or resting.

The best way to understand it
is to use it.

Free to start. No account required for the first room.

Start your Room Memory Map