Wisdom Loop

The playbook

A calm instrument for the reader you want to be.

Wisdom Loop is a private shelf for the books you’re actually reading—across paper, e-book, and audio—with progress you update yourself and a deliberate pause when you finish. This page shows you, in five minutes, how to set it up and why it changes how you read.

Create an accountOpen the app5 min read · updated continuously

Why it exists

Three promises, made out loud.

Every design choice in Wisdom Loop is downstream of these. If a feature wouldn’t strengthen one of them, it doesn’t ship.

Private by default

Your shelf is yours.

No public profile, no social feed, no leaderboard. Just a quiet place where your reading—and your takeaways—belong to you.

One surface, every format

Paper, e-book, audio—unified.

Track pages or minutes in the same instrument. Finally see what you’re really reading across every channel of attention.

Completion as ritual

Finish on purpose.

The last beat of every book is a short takeaway—one or two sentences your future self will actually recognize.

How it works

Six beats from empty shelf to closed loop.

You can be set up in under five minutes. After that, Wisdom Loop fades into the background and asks only for honest updates when they’re easy.

  1. Create an account and sign in

    Your shelf, progress, and takeaways are tied to you alone. There is no public profile or social layer to manage.

  2. Add a book

    Pick the format—paper, e-book, or audio—and set total pages or total minutes so progress can read as a percentage. Optional catalog lookup pre-fills title, author, and often a page count.

    Using catalog lookup for an audiobook? Replace the page count with your runtime in minutes.

  3. Make Now your working surface

    Now shows your active reads, progress bars, and the thread-count panel. It answers a single question: what deserves attention right now?

  4. Use Library for the whole shelf

    Search and filter by format or status when you want the full picture, or reopen a book you’ve set aside.

  5. Save progress on the book page

    Enter the page you’re on—or minutes listened—then save. Your bar, library table, and momentum signals update together. Reach 100% on an active read and you’ll be guided to complete the book.

  6. Close the loop when you finish

    Completion asks for a short takeaway—one or two sentences is enough, or skip it. The goal is a deliberate pause: what do you want to remember after you close the cover?

Read the compass

The thread count, decoded.

Think of a thread as one book you’re tracking—not a social thread, just a single line of attention from start to finish. The panel on Now shows your shelf at a glance.

On shelf

Every book you’re tracking in Wisdom Loop, regardless of status.

Active · Completed · Abandoned

Where each thread stands. Active is still in play. Completed is intentionally finished. Abandoned is honest closure—clearing cognitive load without pretending you failed.

Paper · E-book · Audio

A format split that reveals whether your attention is spread across media or clustered in a single channel.

Momentum, at four speeds

Shown when you have at least one active read. Momentum blends how far you’ve come with when you last saved progress—never a score, never a streak.

Just cracked

Active reads under about 10% complete. Early days—good moment to decide if this book still earns a slot on Now.

Within reach

Active reads at about 80% or more. A nudge to plan the last stretch and the completion ritual before attention drifts to the next title.

Gone quiet

No progress saved for roughly the last week (or never). Not a judgment—a gentle signal that a thread may need a small next step or a conscious pause.

Long silence

No progress for roughly the last month. Useful for spotting books that are still marked active but no longer match real life.

Percentages on cards and in the library are derived from your current pages or minutes versus the total you set for that book. They’re a map of where you are in the volume—not a score, not a streak.

Habits that compound

Small rituals, lasting focus.

  • Keep active reads few

    “Active” should mean “I intend to finish this soon.” Everything else can live in the library as completed, abandoned, or a future add.

  • Log progress when it’s easy

    After a chapter, a commute, or a listening session. Small, honest updates keep momentum honest without turning reading into data entry.

  • Use abandoned deliberately

    Releasing a book you’re not finishing frees attention for what you do care about. It’s part of focus, not failure.

  • Write takeaways you’ll recognize

    Future you doesn’t need polish—just enough language to reopen the insight in thirty seconds.

  • No auto-sync from retailers

    Manual progress is the product’s contract with reality today. That trade-off keeps scope clear and your data under your control.

Begin quietly

Bring your books. Keep your insights. Let completion be the celebration.