A fast, calm app for David Allen's GTD method — the one that keeps your head clear by moving every commitment out of memory and into a system you trust. Built by someone who's practiced it for thirty years and already built one GTD app.
14 days free. No credit card required.
You read the GTD book. You believed it. Then you spent a decade trying to run it inside tools that weren't designed for it.
In karate, there's an image used to define the position of perfect readiness: mind like water. Imagine throwing a pebble into a still pond. How does it respond? Totally appropriately to the force and mass of the input, then returns to calm. It doesn't overreact or underreact.— David Allen, Getting Things Done
GTD done right is three moves: capture, clarify, engage. Mind Like Water is built so each one takes seconds — not minutes.
Press N anywhere to drop a task or note into Inbox. No forms, no fussing, no app to open. Deal with it later — right now, just get it out of your head.
Turn inbox items into Next Actions, Projects with outcomes, Someday/Maybe, or Reference. Then slice the list by Area, context tag, or due date — every view filters the same way, so your muscle memory works everywhere.
Today view surfaces what's due, starred, and in focus. Weekly Review is one keystroke away on your laptop, one tap away on your phone. And if something lands in your head mid-walk, the microphone button is always right there.
Every other GTD tool makes you pick one or the other, then tacks on the second as an afterthought. Mind Like Water was built to hold both from day one — equal partners, linked together.
A real writing surface — headings, tables, checklists, images. Link any note to the tasks and projects it belongs to. No more hopping between apps, no more copy-paste, no more "where did I put that."
Tasks live inside Projects with explicit outcomes, under Areas of Focus. Not just a flat list with tags — a real GTD hierarchy, the way the book describes it.
A writing surface attached to today, with tasks and projects mentioned inline. Journal meets planner. Review yesterday, plan today, write what you're thinking — all in one place.
Hit Shift + N on desktop or the microphone button on mobile, and just talk. AI pulls out the task, the due date, the area it belongs to, and any person or context you mentioned — then drops it into your Inbox already structured, not a raw transcript. Built for the moments your best ideas happen: driving, walking, mid-conversation, any time typing isn't an option.
Weekly Review is the ritual that makes GTD work — and the one almost everyone skips. Mind Like Water reads your week and writes you a clear summary: what you finished, where you're stuck, what deserves attention next. You still make the decisions. The app does the reading for you.
Every action has a shortcut, and every shortcut respects context — typing in a text field never triggers a view jump. Press ? anywhere to open the full list. Forget it once, see it once, remember it forever.
Every app on this list is good at something. None of them is built end-to-end around the way David Allen actually describes the system.
| Mind Like Water | Todoist | Things | OmniFocus | Nirvana | Amplenote | Notion | Obsidian | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Built around the full GTD method — projects with outcomes, Areas of Focus, Someday/Maybe, Reference | ✓ | ~ | ~ | ✓ | ✓ | ~ | — | — |
| Notes and tasks are equal partners, not an afterthought | ✓ | — | — | — | — | ✓ | ~ | ~ |
| You can run the whole thing from the keyboard | ✓ | ~ | ~ | ~ | ~ | ~ | — | ✓ |
| Areas of Focus are a real part of the structure, not just a tag | ✓ | — | ~ | ✓ | ✓ | — | — | — |
| A daily journal page built in — write, plan, reflect in one place | ✓ | — | — | — | — | ✓ | ~ | ✓ |
| Opens in any browser on any device | ✓ | ✓ | — | — | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | — |
| Voice capture that uses AI to turn what you said into a structured task | ✓ | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
| AI-written weekly review — reads your week and tells you where to look | ✓ | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
| A modern, calm design — not a spreadsheet or a power-user console | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ~ | ~ | ~ | ~ | ~ |
I've been practicing GTD since the book came out. I've re-read it every couple of years, went through the official GTD training, and — on my own time — ran training sessions on it for teams inside a large tech company. It mattered enough to me that I wanted other people to have it too.
I've also spent twenty years building software at some of the largest tech companies in the world, and I've tried nearly every task and notes app ever made. Todoist, OmniFocus, Things, Nirvana, Notion, Obsidian, Apple Notes, Roam, Logseq, and a dozen more. Each gets something right. None gets it all right.
In 2014 I co-founded GTDNext, a web-based GTD tool. I ran it with my co-founder for seven years and was one of its heaviest users. In late 2020 I sold my share and stepped away — good run, good product — but by the end I had a long list of things I'd do differently if I started over.
Mind Like Water is that list, built. A strict take on Getting Things Done. A modern, calm design. Everything driven by the keyboard. Notes and tasks as equal partners, not afterthoughts. Opens in any browser on any device. Nothing tacked on, nothing half-done.
If you've been bouncing between apps trying to stitch something together — this is the one I built for us.
If it's not better than what you're using now, you've lost nothing. If it is — $5/mo while founding spots last.