Built for

Capturing a parent's wisdom before memory fades

Raj, adult son — his father is 78 and starting to repeat himself

Raj's father is still sharp most days. But there are mornings now where the same story comes twice, and names that should be easy take a moment to surface.

Raj has started noticing which conversations are still there and which ones are becoming harder to reach. His father spent thirty years running a small manufacturing business. He knows things about negotiation, about loyalty, about how to treat people who work for you, that Raj has never fully understood.

Raj started recording their Sunday calls. He also went back through old emails — his father's instructions, his advice on the business, the occasional note he'd sent during hard times. He sent all of it to WisdomTwin.

The twin isn't his father. Raj doesn't pretend it is. But when he faces a decision he doesn't know how to make, he can open it and ask — and the answer comes back in the logic his father would use, grounded in the things his father actually said.

He started the process six months ago. He's glad he didn't wait longer.