
Most software treats deletion as a decision.
You press backspace. Meaning disappears. The system assumes certainty.
But writing doesn’t work like that.
Deletion, in real writing, is hesitation. It’s the moment where something almost works, but not quite. The idea is rejected, but the replacement hasn’t arrived yet. That gap — small, fragile, cognitively expensive — is where writers freeze.
Traditional editors do two harmful things in that moment:
The brain now has to remember what it just rejected while forming the next idea. Cognitive load spikes exactly when it shouldn’t.
This project is about fixing that moment.
Undo is explicit. Deliberate. Time travel.
Deletion is implicit. Continuous. Present‑moment thinking.
Conflating the two is a category error.
Observation of tools like Google Docs, IDEs, and note apps show: