They did the hard thing. Say so.
The exam passed on the second try. The offer that took five years of kitchen-table doubt. When someone finally gets the thing they sweated for, a thumbs-up in the group chat doesn't quite cover it. Mark it properly — the whole long way round, and the people who watched.
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Imagine: the night before they start, they open a page from their family that remembers the attempt that failed — and exactly how loudly the house shouted when the result came.
Someone already made one like this
For the one who did the hard thing, from the people who watched.
Open Daniel's page →Moments to include
- The kitchen-table moment they almost gave up
- The long way round, date by date
- What this says about them (it isn't 'clever')
- The morning of the result, exactly as it landed
- Notes from everyone who's been quietly cheering
- The last line: we always knew
Only what fits — their page won't read like anyone else's.
How it comes together
You tell the story in a short conversation — the doubt, the second attempt, the day the result landed. It becomes a proud, restrained page that says what the family actually feels, with none of the corporate gloss.
Tell us about them
A short, calm conversation — who they are, what you're marking, the moments worth keeping.
Watch it take shape
A finished page appears, built around your words. Change anything just by saying so.
Hand it to them
A memorable address, shared by message or QR — or sealed until the exact moment you choose.
More ideas
See all ideas →Milestones
Birthday
Imagine: they wake up to a link, and it's a whole page of you taking the mick out of them for four scrolls before going devastatingly sincere at the bottom.
Milestones
Graduation
Imagine: the night before the ceremony, they open a page from their family that starts at age eight, bandaging the dog, and ends with their new title.
Milestones
New baby
Imagine: a grandmother on the other side of the world opens a page at breakfast and meets her grandson — the time of birth, the yawn, the middle name that's hers.
Asked, gently
What occasions does this fit?
Passing the bar, the boards, the CPA. A promotion fought for, a first job, a business finally launched. Anything where you watched them earn it.
Can it mention the time it didn't go their way?
That's usually the most powerful part — the attempt that failed and the decision to go again. You control every word, so it honours rather than embarrasses.
Can colleagues or the study group sign it too?
Yes — add a guestbook and let everyone from their corner leave a note. 'Drinks are on you, counsellor' has a permanent home now.
Someone you love should know exactly how you feel.
Free to begin & preview — from $9.99 when you're ready to give it.