Relationships
Track the people and relationship milestones that matter most.
MyLifeOmeter.com helps you keep family, friends, partners, birthdays, anniversaries, shared time, and important relationship dates visible in your personal life dashboard.
What you can track
People who matter
Add the relationships you want to keep close and give their milestones a place in your MyLifeOmeter.
Birthdays and anniversaries
Keep meaningful dates connected to the people they belong to so they are easier to remember.
Shared time
See relationship context through time lived together, ages, milestones, and family moments.
Built for real life
- Track family birthdays, anniversaries, and relationship milestones.
- Keep a clearer view of shared time with partners, children, parents, and close friends.
- Connect people to important date reminders so fewer moments slip by.
- Use relationship milestone tracking alongside life metrics and perspectives.
How people actually use MyLifeOmeter.com
Why relationship dates belong beside your own timeline
Most missed birthdays are not memory failures—they are scheduling failures. When each person has their own orbit of school plays, travel, work peaks, and health surprises, loving someone well takes a system that surfaces dates before they collide with a packed week.
Tracking relationships in MyLifeOmeter is not surveillance. It is a shared calendar that reflects emotional priority: you decided these humans matter enough to name, date, and remember in public daylight.
- Example: entering parents’ anniversaries next to your siblings’ birthdays so family gatherings stop sneaking up as ‘next weekend, maybe.’
- Example: noting a friend’s sobriety date or remission milestone alongside casual plans so celebrations feel intentional, not accidental.
Shared time without turning love into accounting
Counting days together can clarify patterns—who keeps sacrificing weekends, which season of travel broke the budget—without reducing intimacy to an invoice. Use the numbers to trigger honest conversations, not scorekeeping.
When conflict shows up in the data, treat it as information about schedules and stress, not about worth. That distinction keeps the dashboard on your side.
Parents, partners, and chosen family
Biological family and chosen family often need different reminder rhythms. Kids need school-year cadence; aging parents may need medical visit cadence; friendships may need quarterly check-ins because daily texting is not how you show care.
MyLifeOmeter lets you attach dates to the relationship type you actually have, rather than forcing every bond into the same template.
Questions people ask
- What if I only want private reminders, not partner visibility?
- Use account privacy settings and avoid sharing features. Reminders can stay tied to your account without inviting another user into every detail.
- How specific should notes be for sensitive milestones?
- As specific as your comfort allows. Some users keep only month-and-day for safety; others add context in private notes. Match the record to your risk tolerance.
- Does tracking relationships make holidays transactional?
- Only if you treat reminders as obligations. Reframe them as opportunities to choose how you show up—call, letter, visit, or quiet acknowledgment—based on the real relationship today.
- What about co-parents, ex-partners, or blended families?
- Label relationships clearly and keep reminders fact-based—pickups, school events, medical appointments. Neutral language in the tool reduces accidental friction in complicated dynamics.