Life never stops for kids — it begins with them.
Moment 24 was born on a weeknight, in a Quebec kitchen, at 6:30 p.m., between a supper going cold and a text that flipped the day.
I have two teens between 10 and 16. One night it's hockey, another basketball, the weekend soccer. In between: exams, friends' parties, rides shooting off in every direction, and a school calendar that changes every three weeks.
And on top of that, the endless juggling: the fridge calendar, extracurriculars, sports, pedagogical days, the school calendar, my personal Google, my work Outlook, and now — good luck — my two teens' piecemeal work schedules that shift every week.
"How am I going to get everything in one place without missing a thing?"
I breathe. Sweat down my back the night before a day off, wondering what I forgot. A friend tells me about her day camp booked twice because she thought it was the other week. Another one: the pedagogical day forgotten — no one home, no one to pick up the kid. The text that lands at 3:42 p.m. during a meeting.
S-O-S.
Moment 24 wasn't born from an algorithm. It was born from a visceral need for clarity. From putting down, once and for all, the mental load we carry as a couple or alone — into one calm, shared, respectful place.
Lighten parental mental load by dropping it into one clear, calm place that respects your data.
Families running their week without post-its, screenshots, lost emails, or the feeling of doing the thinking alone.
What we believe
Mental load is real
Name it, share it, put it down somewhere. A good tool takes its share.
A tool for parents must be calm
No red badges, no gamification, no FOMO. Just what's needed.
Your data isn't a product
It stays in Canada, encrypted, and leaves with you when you leave.
Co-parenting is work
We won't be a judge. We just want to be a good kitchen table.
What we believe
Mental load is real
Name it, share it, put it down somewhere. A good tool takes its share.
A tool for parents must be calm
No red badges, no gamification, no FOMO. Just what's needed.
Your data isn't a product
It stays in Canada, encrypted, and leaves with you when you leave.
Co-parenting is work
We won't be a judge. We just want to be a good kitchen table.