Okay, Let's See What This Is

$9.00

You might have a book. Let’s check.

It might not be a full story just yet. It’s a handful of moments that keep showing up like they’ve got something to say.

And now you’re stuck in that very specific loop of:
“Wait… is this actually anything?”
followed closely by:
“Also, be honest—would anyone care?”

Fair questions.

This helps you answer them—without outlining your entire life or auditioning for a Pulitzer. (Yet.)

You might have a book. Let’s check.

It might not be a full story just yet. It’s a handful of moments that keep showing up like they’ve got something to say.

And now you’re stuck in that very specific loop of:
“Wait… is this actually anything?”
followed closely by:
“Also, be honest—would anyone care?”

Fair questions.

This helps you answer them—without outlining your entire life or auditioning for a Pulitzer. (Yet.)

An image of the cover of Okay, Let's See What This Is, featuring a 1980s woman holding a notebook and a pen, ready to see if she's got a great memoir idea. Plus, it shows two interior pages of the trackers.

This is where you stop guessing.

Let’s figure out if you have a book—or just a very confusing story for your therapist.

Right now, it’s not a book. It’s a question.

You’ve got a few moments that feel important—like the kind you bring up at a dinner party and they get a reaction.

But you still can’t tell if it’s actually interesting (as in: this could be a book)… or just interesting (as in: to your best friend, your mom, and your cat—and even they might be humoring you).

That’s the hard part. Not the writing. Just figuring out if there’s something here worth following.

Instead of trying to make your entire life make sense (honestly? too ambitious), this zooms in on one piece and gives you a simple way to look at it differently.

You’ll see what holds up, what falls flat, and what might actually carry a story.

Not everything will. That’s fine.

But the part that does? That’s where this starts getting interesting.

  • A quick way to figure out what you’re actually working with—without turning this into a whole project.

    Inside, you’ll:

    • Get your idea out of your head and into one clear, “say it out loud” version

    • Pressure-test it with a couple of filters that show what’s actually there

    • Separate what happened from what it means (these are not the same thing)

    • See where there’s tension, stakes, or something worth following

    • Walk away knowing whether you’ve got something—or what’s missing (and what to do next)

    No outlining your entire life. No overthinking required (or at least, less of it).

  • 1️⃣ Pick the piece that won’t leave you alone
    Not your whole life. Just the part that keeps coming back.

    2️⃣ Work through the pages
    Answer the questions, check the boxes, see what holds up.

    3️⃣ Pay attention to what clicks
    There’s usually a moment where it shifts. That’s the part you’re looking for.

    • A short, focused workbook for “wait… is this anything?” moments

    • PDF format (works in GoodNotes, Notability, Apple Notes, or printed out and highlighted like it’s 2003)

    • Clean layouts that guide you without turning into homework

    • Instant digital download—no waiting, no shipping, no dramatic buildup required

  • Do I need to already know what my memoir is about?
    No. That’s literally the point of this.

    Is this for beginners or people already writing?
    Both. If you’re circling an idea—or halfway into one and questioning everything—this will help you see it more clearly.

    Is this going to tell me exactly what to write?
    No. It helps you figure out what’s there so you can decide what to do with it.

    How long does this take?
    You can move through it in 15–30 minutes. The clarity tends to stick around longer.

    Can I use this for journaling or personal writing?
    Absolutely. Anything in the “my life, my story, what even was that?” category works.

    What happens after this?
    Once you see it, you’ve got options—follow the thread, expand it, or finally start writing it down.