About Storylit
Some people have a narrator. Now everyone can.
Storylit was built on a quiet personal discovery.
Katherine Smith — the creator of Storylit — thinks about thinking. Metacognition, the act of observing your own mind in motion, is something she does constantly and naturally. She replays her own story, maps moments, makes meaning out of them, connects threads between who she was and who she's becoming.
When she started building Storylit, she assumed everyone did some version of this.
They don't.
Some people don't have a narrator. They move through their lives without automatically replaying, reflecting, or constructing a storyline out of what happened to them. Not because something is wrong with them — just because that's not how their mind works.
Storylit exists for them. And for everyone who journals but never looks back. And for the people who want to feel their own story as something worth telling.
This is not another journaling app. It's not about streaks or habits or self-improvement metrics. It's about transformation — taking the raw, scattered, ordinary moments of a life and rendering them as literature. Your words, shaped into something you'd actually want to read.
Your days. Your story.