For the ones who come after you

What would you want them to know?

You get one post. Make it count. LifePost is a place to leave behind the one thing you want the world to remember about you. Not a feed. Not a profile. Just your words, preserved.

LifePosts

Words that outlast a lifetime

These are examples of the kinds of LifePosts people leave behind.
Each one is a life, distilled to what matters most.

JO
James Okafor
1985 · Lagos → London
I am writing this on the day my daughter turned three. She asked me today where the sun goes at night, and I told her it goes to light up the other side of the world so that other children can play outside. She seemed satisfied with that. If you are reading this and I am not here to answer your questions anymore: the world is kinder than the news suggests. Most people want to help. Say thank you more than you think you need to. And call your mother. She worries about you even when she pretends she doesn't.
Written 2025Read more
MC
Maria Chen
1952 · Taipei → San Francisco
To my grandchildren I haven't met yet: I crossed an ocean at 24 with two suitcases and a phrase book. Your grandmother didn't speak a word of English the day she arrived in San Francisco. I learned it from soap operas and the woman at the laundromat who became my first American friend. I want you to know that fear and courage are not opposites. They live in the same breath. Every morning I woke up terrified, and every morning I got dressed and walked out the door anyway. That is the only secret I have to share. The rest, you will figure out for yourselves.
Written 2024Read more
FD
Frank Deluca
1951 · Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
I'm not good with words. I drove a bus for 31 years and I was married to Marie for 40. That's my life and I wouldn't change any of it. Kids — I love you. I should have said it more.
Written 2022Read more
AP
Aiden Park
1997 · Portland, Oregon
I'm 28. I don't have some big life lesson. I just want proof I was here and that I was mostly happy. That feels like enough.
Written 2025Read more
SH
Sofía Herrera
1968 · Oaxaca, Mexico
My mother could make seven meals from one chicken. I asked her once how she learned to cook like that and she said, 'Necessity, mija.' I raised four children. I burned dinner more times than I can count. I laughed more than I cried, which I think is the only score that matters. To my family: thank you for sitting at my table all these years. The kitchen is yours now.
Written 2024Read more
RA
Ruth Andersen
1938 — 2023 · Minneapolis, Minnesota
I taught fourth grade for 38 years. That means I taught roughly 950 children how to do long division and write a paragraph with a topic sentence. But the thing I hope they remember is that I told each one of them, on their birthday, something specific I admired about them. I kept a notebook. I still have it. If your name is in that notebook, I meant every word.
Written 2019 · LifePost unlocked 2023Read more

“To live in hearts we leave behind is not to die.”

— Thomas Campbell

How it works

Three steps. No rush.

01

Reflect

Take your time. There's no rush, no pressure, nothing to keep up with. Think about what you want the people who come after you to know.

02

Write

Compose your LifePost. Text, photos, video. One post that represents you. Guided prompts are there if you need them, but the words are yours.

03

Preserve

Choose when your LifePost goes live: now, on a future date, or after you've passed. It will be here, waiting, for as long as it's needed.

Try it now

Write your LifePost

If you only had one message to leave behind, what would you say?Take a moment. No one is watching.

Not sure where to start? Try one of these:

Your words, preserved forever
Why this exists

Most of us will be forgotten
within two generations.

Think about your great-grandparents. Do you know their names? What made them laugh? What kept them up at night? For most of us, those answers are already gone.

We built LifePost because we believe everyone deserves to leave something behind that outlasts their time here. Not a social media profile that gets memorialized and forgotten. Not a gravestone that weathers and fades. Something deliberate. Something that says: I was here, and this is what I wanted you to know.

This isn't a place that wants your attention every day. There's nothing to scroll through. Nothing to compete for. You write one LifePost. You make it count. And it stays here, waiting, for as long as someone needs to find it.

Because the people who come after you deserve to know who you were.

— Kevin Lim, Founder

Don't want to write just yet? That's okay.

Leave your email and we'll remind you when LifePost is ready. Your story can wait — we'll make sure you don't miss the moment.

No spam. Just one email when we launch.