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Creative work is usually better supported when attention has room to move between structure and discovery.

Best use: Use these windows for drafting, editing, design choices, and returning to an idea with steadier attention.

Avoid: Avoid treating a quiet start as proof that the work has no direction.

Read timing notes

Difficult conversations are usually better timed when clarity is stronger than the need to discharge pressure.

Best use: Use these windows to name the real issue, ask a clean question, and leave space for a measured response.

Avoid: Avoid using timing pressure as permission to corner, rush, or overstate the case.

Read timing notes

Project launches work best when momentum is paired with enough structure to absorb the first response.

Best use: Use these windows for clear announcements, contained first releases, and decisions that can be adjusted after feedback.

Avoid: Avoid making the launch carry every hope for the whole project.

Read timing notes

Rest is better supported when the timing lets the body and attention step out of constant response mode.

Best use: Use these windows for lighter schedules, quiet repair, low-demand maintenance, and returning to ordinary rhythm.

Avoid: Avoid turning recovery into another standard you have to perform.

Read timing notes

Financial decisions are better supported when the timing favors review, proportion, and clean tradeoffs.

Best use: Use these windows to compare options, check assumptions, ask better questions, and slow down avoidable urgency.

Avoid: Avoid treating a supportive window as a substitute for research or qualified advice.

Read timing notes

Feedback

Tell us what would make Skywatch easier to use.

A short note is enough. Share what felt unclear, useful, missing, or harder than it needed to be.

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