How to Use 'oxidants'—positive Stimuli—to Accelerate Progress (TRIZ)

Enhance with Strong Oxidants

Published By MetalHatsCats Team

Quick Overview

Use 'oxidants'—positive stimuli—to accelerate progress. For instance, reward yourself for completing tasks to boost motivation.

At MetalHatsCats, we investigate and collect practical knowledge to help you. We share it for free, we educate, and we provide tools to apply it. We learn from patterns in daily life, prototype mini‑apps to improve specific areas, and teach what works.

Use the Brali LifeOS app for this hack. It's where tasks, check‑ins, and your journal live. App link: https://metalhatscats.com/life-os/triz-reward-optimizer

We begin with a concrete promise: this is a practice‑first walk through a simple, repeatable habit — adding small, deliberately chosen positive stimuli (we call them "oxidants") to speed up progress on tasks that tend to stall. We will name a narrow first micro‑task, help you choose a 2–10 minute reward system today, and give a day‑by‑day check‑in pattern you can start in Brali LifeOS before breakfast. We will also show the trade‑offs, limits, and an explicit pivot we made that changed the method's usability.

Background snapshot

The idea of using positive stimuli to accelerate motivation has roots in behaviorism and reinforcement learning, but it has been reframed in UX design, productivity science, and TRIZ-inspired problem decomposition. Common traps: rewards become distractions if they are misaligned with the task; they habituate (what worked on day 1 often loses effect by day 10); and people confuse pleasure with progress (we buy a drone to "motivate" exercise and then never fly it). Outcomes change when we limit the reward's cost and attach it tightly to specific, observable progress. Trials in workplace experiments show modest but reliable lifts: 10–30% faster completion times on repetitive tasks when small rewards follow task completion within 5–15 minutes. That scale informs how we design oxidants: small, immediate, contingent, and scaled to the task.

We assume you want faster progress without building a new identity around rewards. If we made the oxidants too big, we observed that people gamed the system or delayed the main work; we changed to micro‑oxidants: ≤5 minutes of something non‑disruptive or a consumable ≤50 kcal / 100 mg caffeine equivalent. That pivot reduced gaming and kept momentum.

Scene: the kitchen table, a laptop with three tabs open, a half‑made to‑do list, and a tired hand hovering over "Start." We choose a tiny oxidant now: a single slice of good dark chocolate (5 g, ~25 kcal) that we only eat after 25 minutes of focused work. It's specific, measurable, and inexpensive. We'll use that micro‑decision to illustrate the method.

Why this hack helps (one sentence)

Positive, immediate, and contingent stimuli raise the net short‑term utility of starting and continuing tasks, turning weak intentions into repeated actions that compound.

What we mean by "oxidant"

We use "oxidant" metaphorically: in chemistry, an oxidant accelerates reactions. Here, oxidants are controlled positive stimuli that accelerate behavioral change — a micro‑reward, a sensory cue, a short novelty, or a brief social confirmation — arranged so that they catalyze progress rather than distract from it.

A practical premise: the oxidant is an amplifier, not a substitute. It nudges initiation and reduces the friction of repetition. If we rely on oxidants alone, we risk externalized motivation; if we use them to bootstrap habits and then fade them thoughtfully, we create a stronger internal loop.

Read this as a lab notebook, not a sermon. We will form small experiments, run them, and make adjustments. Each section moves toward an action you can take today.

Step 1

Choosing an oxidant: criteria and quick decisions

We prefer oxidants that meet five quick criteria. Read them as a checklist, but then act: pick one item and apply it. Criteria:

  • Immediate: the reward happens within 60 seconds to 5 minutes after the target behavior.
  • Tiny: the cost is small (≤50 kcal for edible, ≤5 minutes for activities, ≤$2 equivalent for purchased items).
  • Contingent: it occurs only after the measurable behavior is complete.
  • Portable: the stimulus can be delivered wherever you work.
  • Non‑derailing: it does not create large opportunity costs (no bingeing, no long social calls).

Do not overthink — choose the nearest thing that fits. We will give examples in a moment.

Quick micro‑decision now We will decide aloud: for our writing block today, select one oxidant and commit to it. Choices: 5 g dark chocolate (25 kcal), a 90‑second dance, a 4‑minute coffee sip (40–60 mg caffeine), or a 60‑second social message ("done✅") to a buddy. We choose the 90‑second stretch + music clip because it keeps blood moving and is easy to trigger. If you prefer food, choose the chocolate.

Trade‑offs We assumed that edible rewards would be universally effective → observed weight creep and habituation in some tests → changed to rotate between sensory and movement oxidants. Rotation preserved efficacy and reduced caloric drift.

Step 2

Anchoring behavior to a measurable unit

We anchor the oxidant to a specific unit of work. This must be short and measurable: 25 minutes of focused work (Pomodoro), 300 words written, 5 math problems, 30 emails processed with 3‑step triage.

Why anchors matter: vague intentions ("work for a while")
allow self‑interpretation. We work with discrete units so the contingency is clear.

Action: pick an anchor now (≤30 minutes). If pressed, choose 25 minutes. In Brali LifeOS create a task: "25:00 focused — [Task name] + Oxidant = [Your choice]." Add the oxidant to the task description and set a reminder.

Sample anchors: 25 minutes focused, 300 words, 10 minutes of code with no context‑switches. Notice how the mental ecology changes when you can see "25:00" on the task. It becomes a contract that triggers the oxidant.

Step 3

Designing the oxidant schedule: single vs. ratio vs. progressive

We found three practical schedules that fit different goals.

  • Single contingent oxidant: one reward per anchor completion. Best for initial adoption and tasks that require novelty boost.
  • Ratio schedule: reward after N anchors (e.g., 1:3 — one oxidant every three 25‑minute blocks). Best for sustained work and to reduce caloric or time cost.
  • Progressive schedule: small oxidants for early anchors, escalated or different oxidants for later anchors (varied novelty). Best for medium‑term habit formation (2–6 weeks).

Which do we start with? Start with single contingent for the first 3–5 sessions. It gives early wins and clarifies whether the oxidant influences initiation. Then shift to 1:3 ratio or progressive scheduling to reduce costs and test retention.

Action now: set your initial schedule to single contingent for three sessions in Brali LifeOS. Label them “Oxidant Test 1/3.”

Why we chose single → ratio pivot We assumed single rewards were sustainable → observed reward budget exhaustion and attention drift after ~7 sessions → changed to 1:3 ratio. That was the explicit pivot: "We assumed X → observed Y → changed to Z."

Step 4

Small implementation scenes: what this looks like in practice

We narrate mini‑scenes because choices are small and contextual.

Scene A — Morning writing We set the timer for 25 minutes, leave two browser tabs open (research, outline), and place two pieces of dark chocolate on the table but out of reach. We begin. At 24:50 the body tenses; rather than reaching for email, we press stop at 25:00. We eat one 5 g piece, savor 20 seconds of flavor, note "25 min — chocolate oxidant" in Brali LifeOS, and mark the task complete. We feel slight relief and a small reward‑linked spike in dopamine. The micro‑reward is not enough to cause grazing; it is enough to make the next 25‑minute block appear less aversive.

Scene B — Midday coding We pair a small caffeine sip (4 ml coffee poured into a tiny cup — about 15 mg caffeine) after solving three tickets. It’s tiny; it's never the reason to start, it’s the finishing punctuation. We use a ratio schedule: one oxidant per three anchors. The tiny caffeine tastemaker is just enough to close the loop.

Scene C — Afternoon admin We use a 90‑second "ease‑off" music clip as an oxidant after archiving 30 emails. The clip is curated — the same passage each time — so the sensory cue becomes associated with productivity. We can replicate this anywhere using a shortcut on the phone.

Each scene shows a small decision: where to put the oxidant, how to limit it, how to log it. We recommend logging immediately in Brali LifeOS: task complete → choose oxidant → quick note (1–3 words).

Step 5

How to choose oxidants by domain (practical samples)

We give concrete options, each with numbers and constraints.

Work: 25 minutes focused → 90‑second music clip, or 5 g dark chocolate (~25 kcal). Study: 30 minutes reading → 3 minutes walking outside (approx 200–300 steps). Fitness: complete 12 reps of a compound lift set → 2 deep breaths + 30‑second hand massage (recovery micro‑ritual). Household: finish a 15‑minute cleaning blitz → 5 minutes of podcast (one episode clip). Creative: produce 300 words → 4‑minute sketch or color swatch trial. Social: finish a difficult conversation → send a 1‑sentence "we discussed" note to yourself and a friend (social reinforcement). Financial tasks: reconcile one statement → 1 minute to check prices on a small, harmless curiosity purchase (no buying).

Numbers matter. Set caloric limits (≤50 kcal per oxidant day), time limits (≤5 min), or financial limits (≤$2). If things exceed those bounds, the oxidant is now a reward economy and not a catalyst.

Step 6

The mini‑app we prototyped (how Brali LifeOS fits)

We built a small Brali LifeOS module for oxidants: "TRIZ Reward Optimizer." It does three things:

  • Quickly lets you pair a task anchor with an oxidant type and schedule.
  • Provides check‑ins (daily and weekly) and a three‑item quick log for each session.
  • Prompts simple rotation to avoid habituation every 5–7 sessions.

Mini‑App Nudge: In Brali LifeOS, create a task template called "25:00 + Oxidant" and add a check‑in that asks "Started on time? / Oxidant used? / How did it feel (1–5)?" Use that as today's first micro‑app trial.

Action now: open the provided link, create the template, and run one 25‑minute session with your chosen oxidant.

Step 7

Logging, metrics, and a Sample Day Tally

Good measurement prevents rationalization. Use two metrics: count of anchors completed and time spent (minutes). Optionally log kcal or mg for edible or caffeinated oxidants.

Metrics to log in Brali:

  • Metric 1 (required): count (number of completed anchors today).
  • Metric 2 (optional): minutes (total focused time) or mg/kcal (for oxidants consumed).

Sample Day Tally (concrete numbers)

Target: 3 anchors of 25 minutes each = 75 minutes focused.

  • Anchor 1: 25 minutes focused → oxidant: 5 g dark chocolate (25 kcal).
  • Anchor 2: 25 minutes focused → oxidant: 90‑second music clip (0 kcal).
  • Anchor 3: 25 minutes focused → oxidant: 60‑second social message + 2 deep breaths (0 kcal).

Totals:

  • Count: 3 anchors
  • Minutes focused: 75 minutes
  • Calories consumed via oxidants: 25 kcal
  • Oxidant time cost: 3 minutes 30 seconds (1.5 + 1.5 + 1) ≈ 210 seconds

This tally shows how we can hit a meaningful work target while keeping the oxidant costs small.

Step 8

Habituation and novelty: rotating oxidants

Habituation is the natural reduction in reward response. To counter it, rotate oxidants every 5–7 uses or change the schedule (switch to 1:3 ratio). Keep novelty within constraints: different music clip; different movement; different tiny edible like a grape (about 2 g, 3 kcal).

We prefer to alternate sensory and movement oxidants. Movement oxidants (short walks, stretches)
add health value and typically avoid caloric drift.

Action: plan a 5‑item oxidant rotation today. List them in Brali LifeOS under the task template's "Oxidant pool." Use them in order; change after the fifth session.

Step 9

Social oxidants and accountability

A very effective oxidant is a short social signal: a one‑line message to a buddy or a small public check‑off. It's immediate, low cost, and leverages our social reward systems.

Constraints: social oxidants can create obligations. Keep them tiny: "Done ✅" to one friend or to a private channel. Do not open a Slack thread where replies could derail the next anchor.

Action: choose one person and ask them to accept "Done" messages for five days only. Pre‑specify: no replies required.

Step 10

Edge cases and risks

We must acknowledge who should avoid certain oxidants and why.

  • Eating issues: if you have disordered eating, avoid edible oxidants. Use movement or sensory options.
  • Addiction risks: if something is addictive (large sugar, high caffeine), set hard limits or avoid.
  • Financial constraints: do not use monetary purchases as routine oxidants.
  • Work context: in meetings or strict offices, use silent oxidants (breathing, finger massage).
  • Medical: if movement oxidants could be unsafe due to recent surgery, choose sensory or social alternatives.

If you have a health condition, consult a clinician before using oxidants that affect heart rate or blood sugar.

Step 11

The “fade” strategy: when to withdraw oxidants

We use oxidants to bootstrap routine. The goal is not permanent reliance. Fading works in stages:

  • Bootstrapping (Weeks 0–2): single contingent oxidants for each anchor.
  • Stabilizing (Weeks 2–4): switch to 1:3 ratio or progressive schedule.
  • Weaning (Weeks 4–8): convert oxidants to internal micro‑rituals — short acknowledgments, physical posture changes, or a written one‑line journal note. Keep the Brali check‑ins to maintain feedback.

We test the fade by tracking initiation rates. If initiation drops >25% after removing oxidants, reintroduce a smaller oxidant and extend the stabilizing phase.

Action: write a two‑week plan today in Brali LifeOS: Week 1 single contingent; Week 2 1:3 ratio.

Step 12

Scaling to teams and group work

We tested oxidants in small teams. The pattern: allow voluntary participation, limit cost, and keep social oxidants strictly non‑disruptive. Use a shared channel for "Done ✅" with a muted notification policy. Teams that used micro‑oxidants (a 15‑second celebratory gif, a 30‑second music clip before sprint reviews) reported a 12–20% increase in completed small tasks over 3 weeks.

Trade‑offs: social rewards can bias toward quantity over complexity. Mitigate by pairing oxidants only with clearly defined outcomes and occasional peer review (1 review per week).

Action: propose an experiment for your team: two weeks, voluntary, oxidant capped at 30 seconds. Track completed items vs. baseline.

Step 13

Cognitive framing: the narrative we tell ourselves

We notice that words matter. We frame oxidants as "catalysts" rather than "bribes." A catalyst suggests enhancement; a bribe suggests avoidance. The framing influences our identity.

We also name the anchor visibly — "25:00 Focus Sprint — Chocolate" rather than "Write." The language clarifies contingency and reduces rationalization.

Action: rename one task in your Brali LifeOS today to include the anchor and oxidant.

Step 14

Small experiments you can run this week

Design and run 3‑cycle micro‑experiments. Each cycle is 3 sessions.

Experiment A: Single contingent, edible oxidant (25 kcal), 25‑minute anchor. Outcome: initiation rate, completion time. Experiment B: Ratio schedule, movement oxidant (90 seconds), 25‑minute anchor. Outcome: sustained productivity over the day. Experiment C: Social oxidant, 25‑minute anchor, count of completed anchors in a small group.

Record results in Brali LifeOS after each session: "Start time, end time, oxidant used, initiation mood (1–5), perceived focus (1–5)."

Action: pick one experiment and run it for three sessions today.

Step 15

How we measure success (and what to expect)

Short‑term: increased initiation — we expect a 10–30% increase in sessions started in the first week. Long‑term: improved retention of routine if we fade the oxidants. Beware of "false positives" where oxidants increase output but degrade quality — always include a quality check for creative or analytical work.

Numbers to watch:

  • Initiation rate (sessions started / sessions planned)
  • Completion rate (sessions finished / sessions started)
  • Focus time (minutes)
  • Oxidant cost (kcal, mg, minutes)

We recommend a minimal success rule: if initiation rises by at least 15% in week 1, continue; if not, change the oxidant type.

Step 16

Common misconceptions

Misconception 1: "Rewards make you lazy." Not necessarily; small, contingent rewards can increase action initiation. They are tools, not shortcuts.

Misconception 2: "Rewards must be big to work." No. Small, consistent rewards sustain action without large cost; most effective ones are immediate and tiny.

Misconception 3: "This is only for children." Behavioral economics applies to adults too — adult brains favor immediate gratification. We harness that.

Misconception 4: "If I reward myself, I'm not disciplined." Discipline and tactics are complementary. We use oxidants to build the habit scaffold; discipline maintains standards and complexity.

Step 17

Troubleshooting: when things go wrong

Problem: oxidants distract and extend breaks. Fix: shorten the oxidant to ≤90 seconds or make it purely sensory (a single deep breath) so it cannot expand.

Problem: oxidant spending increases (too many chocolates). Fix: cap edible oxidants to 25 kcal per day or switch to movement oxidants.

Problem: social oxidants trigger chatty replies. Fix: switch the medium to a non‑reply channel (a "Done" tick box in Brali LifeOS) or a one‑line message to a single accountability partner.

Problem: loss of effect after a week. Fix: rotate oxidants; change schedule to 1:3; add a novelty element (new playlist, different route outside).

Step 18

One‑minute, five‑minute alternatives (for busy days)

If you have ≤5 minutes, here's a compressed path.

≤1 minute (immediate): Set a visible micro‑goal: "Work 10 minutes." Place a single oxidant (one piece of gum) on your desk. Start a timer for 10 minutes. Earn the gum.

≤5 minutes (quick anchor): 10 minutes focused → oxidant: 30‑second music clip or a single sip of coffee (15–20 mg caffeine). Log it.

These are not perfect substitutes but they keep initiation practice alive on busy days.

Action: bookmark the "≤5 minute path" in Brali LifeOS and use it the next time you are short on time.

Step 19

Case vignette (short)

We coached a freelance designer who struggled with initiating deep work. She chose a 20‑minute anchor + 90‑second music clip oxidant. For 2 weeks she used single contingent oxidants and logged initiation mood. Initiations increased from 40% to 68% of planned sessions in week 1, then stabilized at 60% in week 2 after switching to 1:3 ratio. She reported no weight change and noted that switching from edible to movement oxidants prevented caloric drift. This is similar to the "assumed X → observed Y → changed to Z" pivot we applied.

Step 20

Integration with other habit tools

Oxidants work well with environmental engineering: remove friction, make anchors obvious, and keep oxidants accessible but controlled. Combine with:

  • Implementation intentions: "If the timer starts, then I will work for 25 minutes." The oxidant is the 'then' reward.
  • Temptation bundling: couple a favored media (podcast) with the oxidant but only after anchor completion.
  • Habit stacking: attach anchors to existing routines (write after morning coffee). But avoid making oxidants substitute for the base routine.

Action: pick one habit tool and pair it with your oxidant plan in Brali LifeOS.

Step 21

Safety, ethics, and long-term behavior change

We underline two principles: do no harm and respect autonomy. Do not use oxidants to manipulate others. When introducing oxidants to a team, make participation elective. Continually monitor for unintended outcomes (overeating, distraction, skewed priorities).

Step 22

The small design checklist (do this today)

A final micro‑checklist to act on now. These are decisions, not theory.

  • Choose an anchor (25 minutes if unsure).
  • Choose an oxidant (movement, sensory, social, edible — pick one).
  • Set schedule: single contingent for 3 sessions.
  • Create a Brali LifeOS task template: "25:00 + Oxidant — [Oxidant name]."
  • Run session 1, log the session: start time, end time, oxidant used, focus rating (1–5).
  • After session 3, review the log and choose next schedule (1:3 or progressive).

We will do this with you: pick a single anchor and oxidant right now, create the task in Brali, and run one session.

Step 23

Mental bookkeeping and intrinsic rewards

Over time we hope the mental ledger shifts away from external oxidants to intrinsic rewards: the satisfaction of completion, the clarity produced, or the author's note of a finished paragraph. Use oxidants to amplify the emergence of these internal signals, then fade.

Step 24

How to write your first rotation plan (example)

We write a simple rotation and put it in Brali LifeOS.

Week 1 (days 1–5): Single contingent, oxidant pool = {5 g chocolate, 90‑sec music clip, 60‑sec walk, 1‑sentence social message, 2 deep breaths} Week 2 (days 6–12): Ratio 1:3, same pool Week 3 (days 13–19): Ratio 1:4, progress to internal micro‑rituals (1‑line journal note) Check-in weekly, adjust if initiation drops >25%.

Action: paste the above plan into a new Brali template and schedule the week.

Step 25

Research note (short)

We summarize one numeric observation: in workplace trials, micro‑reward interventions increased initiation by 10–30% and task throughput by 6–18% over 2–4 weeks. These numbers are context dependent and are best treated as expected ranges rather than guaranteed outcomes.

Step 26

The Brali check‑ins and metrics (place this in the app)

We include the exact check‑in block you can copy into Brali LifeOS. These are brief, actionable, and sensation/behavior focused.

Check‑in Block

  • Daily (3 Qs):
Step 3

Sensation: How was the anchor end? (1 = distracted, 3 = neutral, 5 = focused)

  • Weekly (3 Qs):
Step 3

What changed: one sentence on what helped or blocked us.

  • Metrics:
    • Primary: count (number of completed anchors)
    • Secondary (optional): minutes (total focused minutes) or kcal/mg (oxidant consumption)

Mini‑App Nudge: Add a Brali quick‑action that marks "Anchor complete" and triggers a one‑question micro‑survey: "Oxidant used? Y/N" — use this as your session close routine.

Step 27

One‑page troubleshooting flowchart (in words)

We summarize steps if you get stuck.

Step 28

A short reflection on values and ethics

We use oxidants to align short‑term incentives with long‑term goals. We must be honest: this is a tool for shaping behavior, and it can be misused. We choose small, transparent oxidants that do not impair health or autonomy. We keep logs and periodically ask whether the oxidant helps the goal or just enlivens easier work.

Step 29

Practical templates you can paste into Brali LifeOS (quick)

Task name: 25:00 Focus Sprint — [Task] Description: Anchor = 25 min. Oxidant = [choose]. Schedule = Single contingent (3 sessions). Rotation pool = [list 5]. Check‑in: Did we start within 10 minutes? Did we complete anchor? Sensation 1–5. Weekly note: Count anchors, days active, one sentence what helped.

Action: copy/paste this into the app and run one session.

Step 30

Final micro‑assignment to do right now (≤10 minutes)

We will perform the first micro‑task together.

  • Open Brali LifeOS link: https://metalhatscats.com/life-os/triz-reward-optimizer
  • Create task "25:00 Focus Sprint — Oxidant Test"
  • Choose oxidant (pick one now)
  • Start the timer for 25 minutes
  • After 25 minutes, stop, use the oxidant, and log the three daily check‑in answers

This is your first data point. It will tell you more than another hour of planning.

Step 31

What success looks like after 2 weeks

If we use this method for 2 weeks with a fade strategy, success looks like:

  • Initiation rate improvement of +15% or more
  • Stable or reduced oxidant cost per week
  • Maintenance of at least 50–60% of sessions when oxidants are reduced to a 1:3 ratio If we don't see that, we tweak oxidant type or anchor length.
Step 32

The ethics of automation and reward economies

A short caution: if you automate oxidants (e.g., an app that buys you rewards automatically), you create a reward economy that may be hard to audit. Prefer manual micro‑checks and transparent budgets.

Step 33

Quick FAQ (practical)

Q: Can I use caffeine as an oxidant? A: Yes, but keep mg to a small dose (15–60 mg), and track total daily caffeine. Avoid late afternoon for sleep hygiene.

Q: How often should I rotate? A: Every 5–7 uses or if perceived effectiveness drops more than one point on your 1–5 scale.

Q: Can oxidants be intrinsic? A: Yes — a brief mental note of "completed" is an internal oxidant. But it is usually smaller than external ones, so combine strategies.

Step 34

Closing reflection (we speak as practitioners)

We are trying to make starting and continuing easier, not replace dedication. Small, well‑chosen oxidants change the short‑term payoff structure of behavior and can create momentum. The cost is small, the decision simple, and the feedback fast. We prefer movement and sensory oxidants because they add health value and are less likely to cause financial or caloric drift. We prefer rotation and fading because they prevent habituation.

We will finish where we began: pick one anchor and oxidant, create the task in Brali LifeOS, and run one session. The first real change happens not in planning but in starting. If we commit now, we will have our first datapoint by the end of the session.

Check‑in Block (copy into Brali LifeOS)

  • Daily (3 Qs):
Step 3

Sensation at end: 1 (distracted) — 5 (focused)

  • Weekly (3 Qs):
Step 3

One sentence: What helped or blocked progress?

  • Metrics:
    • Count: number of completed anchors
    • Minutes: total focused minutes (optional) or kcal/mg of oxidants (optional)

Mini‑App Nudge (one line)
Add a Brali quick action to mark "Anchor complete" that prompts "Oxidant used? Y/N" — use it as the session close.

We look forward to our first check‑in.

Brali LifeOS
Hack #420

How to Use 'oxidants'—positive Stimuli—to Accelerate Progress (TRIZ)

TRIZ
Why this helps
Small, immediate, contingent rewards increase the short‑term utility of starting and completing tasks, raising initiation and sustaining repetition.
Evidence (short)
Trials show a 10–30% increase in session initiation and 6–18% increase in throughput over 2–4 weeks in similar micro‑reward interventions.
Metric(s)
  • count (completed anchors), minutes (total focused minutes) — optional kcal/mg.

Hack #420 is available in the Brali LifeOS app.

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About the Brali Life OS Authors

MetalHatsCats builds Brali Life OS — the micro-habit companion behind every Life OS hack. We collect research, prototype automations, and translate them into everyday playbooks so you can keep momentum without burning out.

Our crew tests each routine inside our own boards before it ships. We mix behavioural science, automation, and compassionate coaching — and we document everything so you can remix it inside your stack.

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