Parents & kids.
The grades, the strike days, the permission slips, the 17:30 pickup — Mira runs the family logistics and texts you the moment something actually needs you.
Forty notifications become one line.
She connects through your own parent account — Pronote, the portal, the class newsletters — and reads it all so you don’t. Grades, homework, strike days: one plain line a day, with the fix already drafted when something needs one.
A text when it matters. Not a map to refresh.
Their phones share location with yours — and they know it. She stays silent while everything is normal and speaks up the second it isn’t: home safe, running late, phone about to die. No dot to stare at, no history kept.
Slips signed. Parties RSVP’d. Swim moved.
Activities, the pediatrician, the birthday party that lands on swim class — she spots the clash before it happens, offers the trade, and runs the whole chain on a one-word yes. Permission slips come back signed, on time, every time.
Nobody is the default parent.
Both of you have her — the same family brain on two phones. She keeps the split fair, sends each reminder to whoever’s turn it is, and keeps you in sync without a single “did you see the school email?”
Six skills, one family brain.
Everything the family hands her.
The school in one line a day
Pronote, the parent portal, the class newsletter — read for you and condensed into one plain sentence at pickup time. The noise never reaches your pocket.
Grades & homework, from your account
She connects through your own parent account — never the kids’ — and surfaces the 16/20 worth celebrating and the chapter 7 worth checking tonight.
Arrival texts, not tracking maps
Home safe, left on time, running late — a text the moment it matters instead of a dot you refresh. Quiet is the default.
Permission slips, never late
Spotted in the pile of school emails, signed, returned before the deadline — with one line in your thread telling you it happened.
Activities & carpools, orchestrated
Judo moves, the carpool swaps, the strike day gets covered by grandma — she trades seats and slots until the week works again.
Family meals, planned around everyone
Practice nights, the picky eater, what’s actually in the fridge — dinner planned around the family you have, not the one in cookbooks.
Both parents, kept in sync
The same brain on two phones. Every reminder goes to whoever’s turn it is, the split stays fair, and nobody becomes the default parent.
The kids’ consent, built in
They know their phones share location, and they know why. Nothing runs behind their backs — that’s the deal, and she keeps it.
Location history, never stored
She acts on the moment — arrived, left, late — then forgets it. There is no map of your kids’ movements, anywhere, by design.
Parenting has enough surprises.
She catches the logistics so you catch the moments. €20/mo, three skills included.
Build your Mira