YouAreMe helps you find people whose inner world feels like yours. It learns from your private journal to surface patterns in how you think, feel, and see life, then lets you choose whether to discover similar people.
Hi Product Hunt,
I built YouAreMe around a simple feeling: sometimes you meet someone and their mind feels strangely familiar.
The product starts as a private AI journal. You write your thoughts, and YouAreMe helps surface recurring patterns, values, emotions, goals, and ways of seeing the world. From there, you can choose whether to use those patterns to discover people whose inner world may feel like yours.
The important part is choice. Your journal starts private. Public notes and discovery are opt-in, so YouAreMe can be used as a private self-understanding tool or as a way to look for deeper recognition with others.
I am launching here because I want honest feedback on the core idea:
Can private journaling become a better way to find people who actually feel familiar?
I would love to hear what feels clear, what feels uncomfortable, and what would make you trust a product like this enough to try it.
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The idea of matching people by their inner wiring instead of surface stuff is really intriguing. After writing a few journal entries it surfaced someone whose way of processing things genuinely felt like looking in a mirror.
Report
Used it for a few days and the matching actually feels thoughtful, not random. It picked up on some quiet patterns from my journal entries that I wouldn't have flagged myself.
Report
The choice to make the matching opt-in instead of automatic is such a thoughtful UX call, especially since the app starts by reading your most private writing.
Report
Took it for a quick spin and was surprised how specific the pattern summaries were from just a few journal entries, like it picked up on the way I frame small daily moments. The opt-in for matching keeps it from feeling like another swipe app.
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The idea of matching people by their inner wiring instead of surface stuff is really intriguing. After writing a few journal entries it surfaced someone whose way of processing things genuinely felt like looking in a mirror.
Used it for a few days and the matching actually feels thoughtful, not random. It picked up on some quiet patterns from my journal entries that I wouldn't have flagged myself.
The choice to make the matching opt-in instead of automatic is such a thoughtful UX call, especially since the app starts by reading your most private writing.
Took it for a quick spin and was surprised how specific the pattern summaries were from just a few journal entries, like it picked up on the way I frame small daily moments. The opt-in for matching keeps it from feeling like another swipe app.