I Want You to Know Example

$39.95

Tell us who this is for and the core message you want to send. Share any relevant context that affects tone or content (for example: estranged parent, close friend after a fight, romantic partner, coworker), how long it’s been since you last spoke, and whether you want the message to aim for reconciliation, set a boundary, express feelings without expecting a response, or something else.

Helpful details to include:

  • Recipient (brief): e.g., “my sister,” “an ex,” “my dad.”

  • Your goal: reconciliation, apology, closure, boundary-setting, confession, or just to be heard.

  • Key facts or events to mention (dates, incidents, misunderstandings).

  • Tone: calm, firm, vulnerable, concise, formal, or casual.

  • Anything you specifically want to avoid saying.

  • Whether you want the recipient to respond or whether this is a one-way expression.

  • Preferred length: short note, a paragraph, a full letter, or a script for a conversation.

Example request you could paste:

  • “My request: a short message to my brother (we haven’t spoken in 2 years). Goal: attempt reconciliation. Mention that I regret how things ended after Mom’s funeral, acknowledge his hurt, and invite a call but don’t pressure him. Tone: calm and sincere. Avoid blaming language. I’d like it to be about 4–6 sentences.”

Once you provide those details, I’ll draft a message that captures your voice and purpose so we can send it with confidence.

Tell us who this is for and the core message you want to send. Share any relevant context that affects tone or content (for example: estranged parent, close friend after a fight, romantic partner, coworker), how long it’s been since you last spoke, and whether you want the message to aim for reconciliation, set a boundary, express feelings without expecting a response, or something else.

Helpful details to include:

  • Recipient (brief): e.g., “my sister,” “an ex,” “my dad.”

  • Your goal: reconciliation, apology, closure, boundary-setting, confession, or just to be heard.

  • Key facts or events to mention (dates, incidents, misunderstandings).

  • Tone: calm, firm, vulnerable, concise, formal, or casual.

  • Anything you specifically want to avoid saying.

  • Whether you want the recipient to respond or whether this is a one-way expression.

  • Preferred length: short note, a paragraph, a full letter, or a script for a conversation.

Example request you could paste:

  • “My request: a short message to my brother (we haven’t spoken in 2 years). Goal: attempt reconciliation. Mention that I regret how things ended after Mom’s funeral, acknowledge his hurt, and invite a call but don’t pressure him. Tone: calm and sincere. Avoid blaming language. I’d like it to be about 4–6 sentences.”

Once you provide those details, I’ll draft a message that captures your voice and purpose so we can send it with confidence.

Elite Packaging