Apps That Make Me Feel Like Iโ€™m Getting My Life Together (for 11 Minutes at a Time)

Because pretending is half the battle.

Thereโ€™s a certain kind of delusion I willingly buy into every time I download a new app: This is it. This is the one thatโ€™s going to streamline my life, optimize my time, and help me become the girlboss/scholar/mysterious-yet-dependable freelancer I always knew I could be. For at least eleven minutes, I believe. Sometimes even twelve.

These are the apps that currently make me feel like Iโ€™m not totally winging itโ€”even if I absolutely am.


Image generated by AI

Hereโ€™s whatโ€™s currently in my digital survival kit:

  1. Notion
    The chaos-hider.
    This is where I pretend Iโ€™m running an empire instead of freelancing from bed with one sock on. I have dashboards titled things like โ€œQ2 Prioritiesโ€ and โ€œContent Pipeline,โ€ and inside themโ€ฆ absolute mess. But the act of making the system makes me feel productive, and honestly, sometimes thatโ€™s enough.

  2. YNAB (You Need A Budget)
    Financial therapy, basically.
    YNAB is the app that finally helped me admit I wasnโ€™t actually โ€œbad at money,โ€ just allergic to looking at it. The categories are soothing. The act of assigning every dollar a job makes me feel like an adult, maybe even a competent one. Of course, I still panic-order Mexican food on occasion, but now I do it with awareness.

  3. LinkedIn
    The mirror I stare into when I want to feel employable.
    Sometimes I log in just to rewrite my headline or edit descriptions of previous jobs. Other times, I get sucked into an existential spiral about professionalism and digital personal branding. Either way, itโ€™s part of the dance.

  4. Spotify
    My emotional filing cabinet.
    I use playlists the way some people use spreadsheets: obsessively, and with deep intent. Want to feel untouchable? I cue up Liberation. Need to spiral artistically? Nervous Breakdown has you covered. Essay Writing is for deep focus, Airplane Dreams is for pretending Iโ€™m a jetset influencer, and Work and Werk are? Yeah, entirely different vibes. Spotify helps me soundtrack my shifting identities, and in a weird way, itโ€™s where I archive all the versions of myself Iโ€™ve been lately.

  5. Rosetta Stone
    French fluency, loadingโ€ฆ
    Iโ€™ve had a lifetime subscription since 2021. I tell myself that counts for something. Every once in a while, I open it and really mean it. I do one lesson, feel accomplished for a day or so, and then forget for two months. But stillโ€”progress?

  6. WordPress
    My digital playground.
    My little corner of the internet where I get to be a writer, a brand, a low-key cultural commentator. Sometimes I break my own layout. Sometimes I fix it. Either way, it’s mine, and thatโ€™s empowering as hell.

  7. Google Sheets
    My old reliable.
    Every tracker Iโ€™ve created recently lives here: job apps, pitch logs, invoices, monthly expenses, which subscriptions Iโ€™m supposed to cancel this month but wonโ€™t. If Notion is the curated surface, Google Sheets is where I bury the stuff that really matters: the raw data, the messy truths, the things I donโ€™t want to admit Iโ€™ve been ignoring.

  8. Fiverr
    Where I plan to sell my skills like hotcakesโ€”or at least try to.
    There’s something thrilling about the simplicity: gig, description, offer. It makes freelancing feel more gamified, less existential. Every new order is a little vote of confidence from a stranger, and thatโ€™s kind of beautiful.

  9. Charles Schwab Bank
    International baddie banking.
    No ATM fees worldwide, and a UI that doesnโ€™t make me want to cry? Revolutionary. Schwab is the one financial app that makes me feel like Iโ€™m planning something bigโ€”like a move abroad or the next chapter of my life. Even if I havenโ€™t fully figured it out yet, it still feels like momentum.

  10. Yuka
    Because ingredient paranoia is my self-care.
    I scan products in Dollar Tree like Iโ€™m cracking codes. This app has me tossing half my toiletries and pretending Iโ€™m an informed consumer instead of just extremely impressionable. Itโ€™s fun! Itโ€™s terrifying! Itโ€™s oddly comforting!

๐Ÿ…Honorable Mention:
Vimeo โ€“ For hosting video work in a slightly more grown-up way. No ads, no chaos, just clean presentation. Itโ€™s the cinematic older sister to YouTube, and when I use it, I feel like I really know what Iโ€™m doingโ€”even if Iโ€™m just uploading a reel I made in my pajamas.


What are the apps you swear by for staying semi-organized? Drop them in the comments or shoot me a message using the contact form!

If you liked this, check out my resume editing gig on Fiverr.