| name | day-planning |
| description | Interactive daily planning ritual that guides the user through a reflective conversation across all life dimensions (work, fitness, relationship, social, adventure) and produces a holistic day plan. Use when the user requests to plan their day with phrases like "plan the day", "plan my day", "plan today", or similar variations. |
Day Planning Ritual
An interactive morning practice that helps plan the entire day holistically across work and personal life.
Workflow Overview
This is a conversational ritual that takes 5-10 minutes:
- Gather context (silent) - Pull calendar, emails, Drive docs, static sections
- Reflective conversation - Ask questions across life dimensions
- Draft plan - Create initial plan with poetic opening
- Refine - Iterate based on feedback
- Finalize - Create artifact when approved
Step 1: Gather Context
Before asking any questions, silently gather:
- Calendar events for today using
list_gcal_events - iOS Reminders - Use
reminder_search_v0to get incomplete reminders, focusing on the "today" list or items due today - Recent emails (last 24 hours) using
search_gmail_messageswithnewer_than:1d- look for urgencies - Static sections by reading
references/static-sections-template.md- contains Climbing Goals, Life Projects, Work Priorities, Work/Life Questions - Relevant Drive docs if calendar shows meetings today - use
google_drive_searchto find related materials
Keep this context in mind but don't present it yet - it informs the questions you'll ask.
Step 2: Conversational Planning
Ask questions in a natural, flowing conversation. Keep it concise - 5-10 minutes total.
Task Collection (ask first)
Before diving into reflection, review what's already captured and ask for anything else:
Present reminders and tasks you found, then ask: "Anything else you need to do today that's not captured yet?"
This ensures:
- All iOS Reminders are accounted for
- Any additional chores, errands, or commitments get added
- Work tasks not reflected in meetings or reminders are captured
Opening Questions (always ask these)
- How do you feel right now?
- What is the main purpose of today?
- How do you want to feel?
Life Dimension Questions
For each area, ask 1-2 focused questions informed by the context you gathered:
Work
- Present relevant meetings/deadlines from calendar
- "What's the ONE most important outcome for work today?"
- If emails show urgencies, mention them
Fitness & Health
- "What movement is planned? Climbing session? Other exercise?"
- "How's your energy level? Any recovery needs?"
Relationship
- "Any dedicated time for [girlfriend/child] today?"
- "Anything they need from you?"
Social Life
- "Any social commitments or people to reach out to?"
- Check calendar for social events
Adventure
- "Any outdoor time or adventure planned?"
- "Or is this more of a rest/recovery day?"
Closing Questions
- Pose one Life Question: Select one from their Life Questions list for reflection. Introduce it naturally: "Something to sit with today: [question]"
Step 3: Draft the Plan
After gathering their responses, create a draft plan following this exact format:
Plan
[1-2 sentence poetic statement about the day's priorities and desired feeling]
Agenda for today
* [List events from calendar and tasks mentioned]
Climbing Goals
[Copy from static sections]
Life Projects
[Copy from static sections]
Work Priorities
[Copy from static sections]
Work Questions
[Copy from static sections]
Life Questions
[Copy from static sections]
Crafting the Poetic Opening
The opening statement should:
- Synthesize the main purpose they identified
- Evoke the feeling they want to cultivate
- Be poetic but grounded
- Be 1-2 sentences maximum
Examples:
- "Today is about domestic order and being comfortable in my own life."
- "Today is about momentum and creating space for what matters."
- "Today is about presence with others and trust in the process."
Draw from their responses about purpose, desired feeling, and the overall shape of their day.
Selecting the Question of the Day
Claude picks one Life Question for the user—do not ask them to choose. Selection should be informed by:
- The day's main purpose and activities
- Themes that emerged in the conversation
- Productive tension or resonance with what's planned
When presenting the draft plan, briefly explain why you chose this question (1-2 sentences). The explanation should connect the question to the day's shape without being heavy-handed.
Step 4: Refine
Present the draft plan in the chat (not as an artifact yet).
Ask: "How does this feel? Any adjustments?"
Iterate based on their feedback. Common refinements:
- Adjust the poetic opening
- Add/remove agenda items
- Reorder priorities
- Clarify phrasing
Step 5: Finalize
When the user indicates they're satisfied, create the final plan as a markdown artifact with the title "Daily Plan - [Today's Date]"
Important Notes
- Keep the conversation flowing and natural - don't robotically go through every question
- If a life dimension has nothing happening, acknowledge briefly and move on
- The poetic opening is key - take time to craft something meaningful
- Static sections should be copied exactly as-is from the template
- Total process should feel contemplative, not rushed, but stay within 5-10 minutes
Updating Static Sections
When the user wants to update Climbing Goals, Life Projects, Work Priorities, or Work/Life Questions, edit references/static-sections-template.md directly. These changes will persist across all future planning sessions.