The stack

Five things, working together.

The Neuro Agent isn't a single app. It's a stack. Five components configured to work together so the system holds the load from day one.

01

A private Notion workspace

Set up around your real life. Tasks, routines, plans, project notes, support context, and anything you want your Agent to remember. Two spaces inside it: a Neuro Support space (where Jamie can help) and a private Home space (where he can't, by default). The architecture is what makes the privacy posture work.

02

Your Support Agent

A configured Claude that runs inside your workspace. It can capture, organise, find, summarise, surface, and reduce. It holds context. Each client's Support Agent is set up with their own context, language, and goals, so it doesn't behave like a generic chatbot.

03

The Action Button shortcut

An iOS Shortcut wired to your iPhone's Action Button (Android phones get an equivalent capture method configured at install). Press, talk or type, and the capture goes through your Support Agent and lands in the right place in your workspace. No friction. No app switching. No "where does this go?" decision.

04

Sensory-friendly phone settings

Notification, motion, focus, accessibility, and display settings configured to reduce sensory and attentional load. iPhone gets specific iOS configurations; Android gets equivalent settings where possible. Small things, but together they change how the phone feels in your hand.

05

Your install interview, baked in

The 90-minute interview at install time becomes the foundation of Agent Memory. Your Agent doesn't start cold. It starts with context.

Where Agent Memory begins

The interview is what makes the system personal.

The interview is 45 minutes of the 90-minute install. It's the most important part.

Without the interview, the system is generic. With it, your Agent already knows the shape of your week, what helps, what doesn't, what you carry, what you avoid, and what you want it to remember on your behalf.

Jamie asks. You talk. The system listens.

What the interview covers:

  • How a normal week looks for you. The good days and the bad ones.
  • What you've tried that hasn't worked.
  • What you've tried that did work, and why.
  • What's been on your shoulders that shouldn't be.
  • What support you have around you. What you don't.
  • What you want the system to do automatically without you asking.
  • What you want it to leave alone.
  • The language you want it to use. The language you don't.

What happens to the interview. Jamie records it (with your consent), runs the transcript through your Support Agent's setup, and your workspace starts informed. The recording is yours. You can delete it at any time. Jamie doesn't keep copies in his own systems.

Your Agent's memory

What your Agent's memory is, and why it matters.

Agent Memory is the shared holding space between you and your Support Agent. Tasks. Routines. Decisions. Patterns. Useful context. The things that would otherwise have to live in your head.

You capture. The Agent holds. The Agent surfaces what matters when it matters.

What Agent Memory holds:

  • Tasks and their state. What's done, what's drifting, what's blocked.
  • Your routines. Morning, evening, weekly admin, monthly admin.
  • Decisions you've already made, so you don't re-decide them.
  • The shape of your week. What's heavy. What's light. What collides with what.
  • Useful patterns about what helps you and what doesn't.
  • Your context for support. What's hard right now. What's improving.
  • Your projects, ongoing work, and anything you want to revisit.

What Agent Memory doesn't do:

  • It doesn't replace clinical records or formal care plans.
  • It doesn't make judgements about you.
  • It doesn't surface things to Jamie unless that's been set up explicitly.
  • It doesn't store things forever without your input. You can prune, edit, archive, or delete anything.

The mind is for having ideas, not for holding them.

Quick capture

Press the button. Get the thought out.

The Action Button on your iPhone is the doorway into the system. One press, voice or type, and what's in your head is in the system. (Android phones use an equivalent capture method configured at install.)

What the Action Button can do at install:

  • Capture a task before you forget it.
  • Capture a thought, an idea, a question, a complaint, a feeling.
  • Update something already in the system.
  • Ask a question and get an answer from your Support Agent.
  • Log how a routine went without opening anything.

Why a button matters. The hardest part of capture is the moment between "I should write this down" and "I have written this down." If there's an app to open, a folder to choose, a category to pick, the thought is gone. The Action Button removes the gap.

The shortcut is configured at install. You can adjust it later. Jamie can show you how.

The phone, configured

Small settings, big difference.

Your phone arrives at install set up to be more usable for an ND brain. iPhone gets specific iOS configurations and the Action Button shortcut; Android gets equivalent settings where possible.

What gets configured:

  • Notification batching, so you're not interrupted constantly.
  • Motion and animation reduced.
  • Focus modes for working, evening, and crisis-mode states.
  • Display brightness and warmth tuned for comfort, not retail-floor brightness.
  • Sound and haptic feedback adjusted.
  • Specific accessibility settings depending on what you've told Jamie helps.

Important. The phone itself is not part of the install fee. You bring your own. iPhone is recommended because the Action Button shortcut is iPhone-only; modern Android (2020+) is supported with an alternative capture surface. If you're unsure what works for your phone, talk to Jamie on the Discovery Call.

Day one and beyond

The install hands you a working system.

The install ends with a 15-minute handoff. You leave with a working system. Not a list of things to do.

Day one

You start capturing. You don't have to use everything. You don't have to use it well. You just press the button and let the system absorb whatever you give it.

First two weeks

The Help layer is built in. Most questions get answered by your Support Agent inside your workspace. Things you'd usually have to ask a person, you can ask the system.

Ongoing

If you continue with Neuro Support (the ongoing monthly service), workspace maintenance and Custom Agent updates happen in the background. You don't have to coordinate it.

If you're on the install only, the system still works. The basic Agent Memory is yours. Workspace maintenance becomes your call. You can come back to ongoing Neuro Support later if it makes sense, or stay on the install. There's no commitment to ongoing service after install.

The system is yours. Use it as long as it's useful to you. Leave whenever you're ready. The install doesn't lock you into the ongoing service, and the ongoing service doesn't lock you into anything beyond the next month. The Agent learns you. You learn the Agent. The point is to make life work, not to keep you on a subscription.

See ongoing support
Worth knowing now

Where your captures actually go.

Your Notion workspace is yours. Jamie has guest access to one page inside it. The proportions below match the architecture.

Private to you

Home

Your whole workspace. Jamie has no access by default.

About Me Diary Goals Routines Tasks Plans Project notes Captures Reminders Reading lists Updates Agent conversations Anything else
Jamie can see

Neuro Support

One shared page: Working on, Current Focus, Help. Everything that lands here is your deliberate choice, depersonalised on the way in.

Your Support Agent reads what you tell it but doesn't auto-write to the shared page. Captures stay in Home unless you deliberately choose to add something for Jamie to see — and when you do, identifying details get stripped on the way in.

Read the privacy posture in full
Fit

It's for people who need a system, not another reminder to try harder.

The install may fit if:

  • You keep losing track of tasks, forms, messages, or appointments.
  • Existing apps work briefly and then collapse.
  • You need capture to be easier than sorting.
  • You want support context remembered.
  • You want a private workspace you control.
  • You want a support worker who can help maintain the system.
  • You're tired of your brain being the only place the plan exists.

If most of those land, book a Discovery Call. If they don't, that's useful information too.

One next step

Talk to Jamie about the install.

The Discovery Call is the start of any install. It's free, low-pressure, and the place to ask the questions that matter to you.

Book the free call See pricing