Shadow Work - Ember
ASO analysis
Good use of the title field.
Solid length. Make sure the first 252 chars hook the reader.
Used by similar apps in your niche, but not in your title or description. Adding these (where genuinely relevant) can broaden your search reach.
Words you and your peers both use. Confirms positioning in this niche.
Keyword rankings
iTunes Search · top 200About
Some things are too heavy to carry and too important to throw away. That's where Ember begins. Every morning, Ember opens to a single prompt. Not a feed. Not a dashboard. Not a choice between seventeen things. One question, written for the part of you that you usually keep quiet. What anger are you carrying that you haven't given yourself permission to feel? Describe the voice of your inner critic. Whose voice is it, really? What would you do tomorrow if you knew no one would judge you? You write. However long you need. There's no word count, no timer demanding productivity, no streak shaming you for a missed day. Just a warm cursor on a dark screen, the way a page looks by candlelight. And when you're done, something unusual happens. Ember asks you a question most journaling apps never will: - Do you want to keep this, or burn it? If you keep it, it joins a quiet archive you can return to. If you burn it, the words catch light at the bottom of the screen. Embers rise. The text disintegrates, line by line, into drifting particles that fade into the dark. A single word remains: Released. Then it's gone. Really gone. No trash folder. No cloud backup. No undo. This is not a gimmick. It's the whole point. Carl Jung wrote that "until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate." Shadow work is the practice of dragging the parts of yourself you've hidden — the anger, the shame, the envy, the fear — into the light long enough to look at them. The value isn't in the archive. It's in the looking. Ember is built around that truth. Some entries deserve to be kept. Most deserve to be written, witnessed by you, and set down. -What's inside • 370 shadow work prompts, one per day, organized across ten themes: anger, shame, fear, abandonment, control, envy, people-pleasing, identity, family patterns, and self-sabotage • A distraction-free writing space. No formatting tools, no word count, no notifications while you work • Burn mode with a deliberate, ceremonial animation and haptic response — because the act of release should feel like something • A private history of kept entries, and a record (without content) of what you released • Live Activity and Dynamic Island support — your shadow session, visible on your lock screen while you write • A single optional daily reminder at a time you choose. No badges. No guilt. No streaks -What's not inside No account. No email signup. No onboarding survey. No subscription. No ads. No in-app purchases. No AI watching your words. No analytics. No cloud. Your writing lives on your device and only on your device. One-time purchase. That's it. You pay once at the App Store. Everything is unlocked from the first launch — all 370 prompts, burn mode, Live Activity, notifications. Ember will never ask you for money again. There is no premium tier. There is no upgrade nudge waiting behind a feature. This pricing is deliberate. Shadow work is personal, and personal work shouldn't be rented to you month after month. You buy the tool. You own the practice. -Who this is for Ember is for people who’ve encountered Jungian Archetypes on Reddit, heard about Inner Child work from a therapist, or felt the pull of shadow work on social media and didn’t know where to start. It’s for those who have tried bloated wellness apps and closed them within a week, seeking something more substantial. It's for the person who suspects — rightly — that the journal they actually need isn't the one with mood graphs and streak badges, but the one that respects the depth of the work they came to do. Open it tonight. Write the thing you haven't said. Keep it if it's meant to stay. Burn it if it isn't. Either way, you did the work.