I've used a lot of productivity apps. Task managers, habit trackers, time loggers, spreadsheets with elaborate color-coding that I maintained religiously for about two weeks before abandoning them entirely. The problem was never discipline. The problem was the apps themselves. Most productivity tools are built around a simple promise: capture everything, and you'll feel in control. And they're not wrong — capturing is valuable. But somewhere between the input and the insight, something gets lost. You end up with a beautifully organized graveyard of tasks you never acted on, and metrics that tell you what happened without helping you understand why. I ran into this problem while building a session management tool for poker players — a group who, it turns out, are obsessed with tracking and deeply frustrated by the tools available to them. What Players Were Actually Doing Before building anything , we talked to a lot of grinders.…