It’s not the forgetting that hurts.
It’s the look on their face.

Every kid email — school, sports, dance, doctor, camp — quietly pulled into one calm list per kid. So the look stops coming.

Launching July 2026. One note when the door opens. Nothing else.

It isn’t the emails. It’s that you’re the only system.

You know Tuesday is library day. The dance recital costume needs measuring this week. The pediatrician portal sent something Monday — you just haven’t opened it yet.

The problem isn’t that you don’t know. You do. The problem is that everything you know is yours alone. Five inboxes. Five calendars. Your head. Your partner’s head. Three half-typed reminders. If you forget, no one else remembers. If you stop being the system, the system stops.

And the worst part isn’t the costume you missed. It’s the little wave from your kid who’s used to it.

Three inputs. One list.

Most of what runs your week falls into three buckets. We handle all three, then merge them per kid, per day. You stop assembling the list.

Forward what matters.

The school newsletter. The dance studio email. The camp portal. The pediatrician's reminder. Forward only those — from any inbox, any provider — to your private Super Parents address. We read those, and only those.

Forward the spring concert email → “Wear white shirt, Friday 6:30 PM” appears on Emma’s list, with the shopping step earlier in the week.

Add the routines you already know.

Tuesday library books. Wednesday orthodontist. Friday lunch money. Set them once. They show up on the right kid’s day, every week. They skip school breaks automatically.

“Pack swim cap — Thursdays after school” appears on Jake’s Thursday, automatically.

Drop in the rest by hand.

The text from another parent. The playdate you just confirmed. The thing your kid mentioned in the car. Pick a kid, pick a day, done.

Coach Ramirez texts that Saturday’s scrimmage moved to 9 AM. Add to Jake’s Saturday in ten seconds.

Set it up once. Then put it down.

  1. Forward the kid stuff.

    From any provider — Gmail, Outlook, Yahoo, iCloud. Just the kid stuff. The rest of your inbox stays yours.

  2. Add what you already know.

    The recurring routines and the one-offs. Two minutes per kid. We catch the rest as the emails come in.

  3. Read three things in the morning.

    At 6:30 AM, one digest per kid. Emma · three things today. Two need lead time. Tap any item to see exactly where it came from. Mark done — or don’t.

The prep happens before the thing.

Other tools tell you Spirit Week is Friday. We tell you to buy the costume by Tuesday.

Other tools put the well-visit on the calendar. We surface it in March, when there’s still an appointment before camp paperwork is due June 1.

You don’t forget the big things. You forget the tiny ones. We catch the tiny ones.

FROM Mrs. Porter
TO parent@example.com
DATE Tue, Sep 9

Hi families — we’re celebrating Dr. Seuss’s birthday this Friday with Spirit Week. Friday is “Cat in the Hat” — kids should come in costume.

Emmathis week
  • Buy Dr. Seuss costume by Tue
  • Spirit Week · Friday
Jakethis week
  • Dance recital costume · Wed
  • Soccer scrimmage · Sat 9 AM

We see only what you forward. No Gmail OAuth, no inbox connection — works with any provider.

The week most parents are quietly running.

Honestly, this is one of the worst underrated parts of parenting.
A working mom of two
I saw the camp deposit email in April. I found it again in May. They'd given his spot away.
A summer-camp parent
The pediatrician sent the well-visit reminder. I meant to schedule. Now they're booked out three months — and her camp form needs that signature.
A mom managing two kids' logistics
If it's not on the calendar, it doesn't happen — and getting it into the calendar is the whole problem.
A working parent, two kids in three activities

62% of parents have missed an important kid event. 71% say they feel like a bad parent when they do.

So the look stops coming.

Super Parents opens to early families in July 2026. Leave your email and we’ll send one note the day the door opens — no countdown, no drip sequence, just the heads-up.

Launching July 2026. One note when the door opens. Nothing else.