About Re:Mind

Re:Mind is a practice for people who choose to think.

It exists for a simple reason:

Clear thinking has become rare, and rarity makes it valuable.

We live in an age of abundance—of information, opinions, explanations, and answers. But abundance has not made us wiser. It has made us faster, louder, and more certain than we deserve to be. We react before we reflect. We inherit conclusions before we examine the frames that produced them.

Re:Mind was created as a response to that drift.

Not as philosophy.

Not as ideology.

As practice.

At its core, Re:Mind helps people build the habit of thinking deliberately—of slowing down long enough to see what's actually happening, and speeding up only once clarity is earned. It's a system designed to interrupt automatic thinking and replace it with something sturdier: judgment you can trust.

Why I Built This

I built Re:Mind because I saw how often good people make bad decisions—not from lack of intelligence, but from invisible constraints on how they think.

I saw it in my own life first.

Overthinking disguised as rigor.

Momentum mistaken for understanding.

Confidence borrowed from others instead of built from first principles.

The problem wasn't effort. It was framing.

Once you inherit the wrong frame, even perfect execution leads you somewhere you didn't intend to go. And most of us never stop to question the frames we're handed—by culture, by media, by institutions, by algorithms optimized for engagement rather than truth.

Re:Mind is my attempt to offer an alternative: a way to own your thinking again.

The Practice

Re:Mind is built around mental models—not as abstractions to memorize, but as tools to use.

Mental models are not answers.

They are lenses.

They help you see structure where there was noise. They surface tradeoffs that certainty tries to hide. They slow down conclusions long enough for understanding to catch up.

Without models, thinking collapses into habit. Familiar paths feel true because they're familiar. Speed replaces scrutiny. Certainty replaces clarity.

With the right models, something changes. You begin to notice assumptions before they harden. You question what feels obvious. You see where a decision is being driven by momentum instead of meaning.

Over time, this compounds.

Your thinking becomes more flexible, not more rigid.

You gain range instead of dogma.

You stop reacting and start choosing.

That is the practice Re:Mind is designed to support—daily, deliberately, and over time.

What Re:Mind Is (and Isn't)

Re:Mind is not a belief system.

It doesn't tell you what to think.

It gives you tools to examine how you think.

Some people engage through the app.

Some through written reflections.

Some through cards, prompts, or shared conversations.

The format matters less than the habit.

Re:Mind is a system you can return to when decisions feel heavy, when clarity slips, or when certainty arrives too easily. It's something you build with—not something you consume.

Founding Team

With deepest gratitude

The Founding Team believed in Re:Mind before it had momentum—when it was still an idea, a direction, a conviction worth testing. This work carries your imprint.

  • Taylor Pineiro
  • Victor Pineiro
  • Victor M Pineiro
  • Greg Babonis
  • Enrique Canals
  • Hannah Stauffer
  • Deborah Myers
  • Holly Klingler
  • Kevin Davis
  • Anthony Cronin
  • Leah Goldman
  • Thomas Stewart
  • Leticia Brazil
  • Arianna Trujillo-John
  • Daniel Elkayam
  • Matthew Kremser
  • Christopher Sung
  • Lisa Riddiough
  • Paul Karchem
  • Tanjina Shapiro
  • Nathan Crumback
  • Nicholas Whitaker
  • Robert Ta
  • Paul Griffin
  • Arvita Tripati
  • Stephen Bruckert
  • Joel Benge
  • Kincade Stirek
  • Lu Cai
  • Meeks
  • John MacDonald

Launch Team

Thank you for helping it reach the world

The Launch Team stepped in when it mattered. Your support helped this practice find others who value clarity over certainty and ownership over convenience.

  • Nathaniel Scott-Reichel
  • Kevin Wong
  • Martin Lenclos
  • Angela Pineiro
  • Jason Meer
  • Sherman Kew
  • Michael Chien
  • Karla Garcia Teruel
  • Gabriel Gooley
  • Logan Grothe
  • Danielle Brabson
  • Adrien Goulet
  • Mark Swiggum
  • Amanda Whitaker
  • Nelson Amador
  • Winston Collier
  • Jake Possehl
  • Valeria Rodriguez Sisson
  • Anna Ho
  • Kevin Yamazaki
  • Shannon Taylor
  • Paul Fiore
  • Caleb Hodes
  • Cecil R Hash Jr
  • Drew Newell
  • Robert Row
  • Jeremy Kotin
  • Dustin Chavers
  • Louisa Henry
  • Matthew Ellsworth
  • Stephanie Orange
  • David Carhart
  • Filip Luchianenco
  • Dara Epstein
  • Molly Siemers
  • Ethan Gilsdorf
  • Victoria Good
  • Micah Vono
  • Faramarz Sokhansanj
  • Alexander Y Patton
  • Nicole Ritterstein
  • Evan Brown
  • Lemuel Thornton
  • James Hutchinson
  • Randy Eigner
  • Maria Cristina Ambat
  • Keren Albala
  • Roberta Stirek
  • Andrew Hume
  • Nicole Bienfang
  • Daryn Kalmus
  • Julia Kozlov
  • Viridjan
  • Joseph Pineiro
  • Michael Papadakis