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MERIDIAN IS YOUR HIGHEST POINT OF CLARITY

Who Meridian is for

Meridian is a planner for the woman whose brain is extraordinary and inconvenient in equal measure: who can see three moves ahead and still lose the thread on the way to the kitchen. It's built for the whole of your life, not just a measure of your productivity. Used daily, it becomes a habit of remembering yourself: carrying only what you want to carry, and prioritizing what actually makes you better.

The Meridian planner — a bottle-green cloth hardcover with gold foil sunburst logo, resting slightly askew across its own cream title-page spread

A planner that makes you think about you. Not just what you're expected to do.

Meridian helps you get clear on what you actually want, and keeps it in view as you move through your weeks: what to carry, what to release, and where your attention actually belongs. It's undated, so stepping away for a while never costs you a page. Just a steady place to come back to yourself.

Handwritten note: Meridian makes you a priority, even when you forget to.

The origin

I've been trying different planners my entire adult life. I love the ritual of using one. I love the record they create, worn in over time, showing signs of a life being lived. But I have never, not one single time, bought the same planner twice. They were all great for certain things and missed on others. My brain clearly works differently than some others do. I do not, for any reason, want a tracker in my planner. For me, those are records of failure, not motivation to stick with it. The planner itself can become that too, so it has to be undated. That way I can come back to it after a break without wasting pages, and without spiraling about having failed. Again. So I got tired of searching for the right one and started making it myself: something that forces me to think about me, not just what I'm expected or feel obligated to do. Something that became a tool for managing this fast and messy brain of mine.

THE LAYOUTS

The structure, spread by spread

Every spread in Meridian works on one of three rhythms: weekly, monthly, and quarterly, so nothing gets lost between them.

The Strategic Reflection and The Week Ahead spread from inside the Meridian planner
The Week Ahead, exactly as it appears inside.

Weekly

The Week Ahead

Your capacity forecast, three priorities to guide your week, a plan for the one thing you're worried will derail you, and a running list of what you've delegated and who owes you an answer.

Daily Pages

An AM and PM capacity check-in, cycle syncing your tasks, a built-in pause at midday to ask what you actually need (food, quiet, connection, or movement), and a re-entry prompt for finding your way back after the day pulls you away. Because it will. It closes with a space to park things for tomorrow and room to document what went well.

1:1 Tracker

A place to capture what matters from a conversation while it's still fresh, instead of losing it by the time you sit back down.

Decisions + Wins

Closes out the week: the decisions worth remembering, why you made them, the wins you don't want to forget, and space for anything that didn't fit the prompts.

The Today and 1:1 Log spread from inside the Meridian planner

Monthly

Strategic Reflection

The thinking that gets crowded out by daily operations: what's changing, what you're avoiding, what opportunity you're not pursuing.

Monthly Reset

Where your capacity actually went, what you're still holding that isn't yours, and whether the strategy still holds.

Quarterly

Strategic Anchors

Three to five priorities you set once a quarter. Every week points back to them, so the small decisions stop drifting from the big ones.

Quarter Ahead

Two pages done honestly before the quarter starts. This is what sets the tone for everything that follows.

THE FOUNDATION

Every design choice is built on evidence, not opinion.

The Science spread from inside the Meridian planner, with the Meridian etymology and four evidence blocks
The evidence page, straight from the planner.

Writing it down makes it stick.

Handwriting engages deeper memory encoding than typing — the physical act helps the plan hold.

Three priorities, not thirteen.

Working memory is finite. Limiting the day to three real priorities matches what the brain can actually hold at once.

The page carries the load.

External scaffolding offloads executive function onto paper, freeing the brain to think instead of just remember.

Plan around the strengths you have right now.

Cycle syncing helps you notice where your capacity actually is and plan your week accordingly — working with your hormones instead of fighting against them.

Be first through the door.

Join the waitlist for early access and launch pricing. No Spam. Only exciting updates and launch notifications when Meridian is ready.