Free guide
The card's been blank for 20 minutes. Here's the fix.
You know what you feel. The blank card doesn't care. And everything you draft either sounds like a greeting-card aisle or like a text message.
The standard that fixes it
Our rule is simple: every message has to survive being read aloud by the recipient to your face. If either of you would flinch, it's cut. That one test removes the foil-above-a-sunset clichés and the essay-length paragraphs nobody handwrites.
One that passed, free
Some people send good wishes. You showed up with a ladder.
Use when: physical, practical help — moves, repairs, hard days.
Notice what makes it work: it names the specific thing (the ladder), it's under 15 words, and it sounds like a person — not a card aisle.
Write your own, or take the thirty
If you'd rather write your own: name one specific thing they did, keep it under 25 words, and read it aloud once before you commit ink. If you'd rather pick from thirty that already passed, that's the pack.
Thank-You & Everyday Pack — $9
30 messages across five tones (warm, elegant, playful, business, family), each with an ID and a use-when line, sized for a real card in a real pen — 40 words maximum, most under 25. Delivered instantly at launch.
Reserve the pack