Contact

Share feedback, bug reports, or collaboration ideas for the LifeHours project.

Reach out

This project is still evolving. If you’ve found a bug, have a suggestion, or want to collaborate, we’d love to hear from you.

Please include as much detail as possible so we can understand what you experienced or what ideas you have.

If you fork or self-host this project, you can replace this page with your own support email address or help desk link so that visitors know how to contact you directly.

Contact form (non-functional demo)

For privacy and simplicity, this static demo contact form does not send messages directly. You can adapt it to your own backend or email service if you self-host the project.

Ideas for your own self-hosted version

If you spin up your own copy of this project, you can connect the form above to your preferred email service, help desk, or secure support system so that visitors can reach you directly.

Ideas for feedback that helps the project grow

If you decide to reach out on your own hosted version, consider sharing stories about how you’ve used LifeHours, edge cases where the tool struggled, or suggestions for guides you’d love to see added in the future.

Documenting your own version’s boundaries

If you adapt this project, you may want to clearly outline what you can and cannot respond to via your contact form—such as not giving personal financial advice or not storing sensitive information by email.

What types of messages help refine the project

If you adapt or self-host the tool, these categories tend to yield the most helpful feedback for ongoing improvement.

  • Misaligned time estimates users discovered
  • Unexpected insights the calculator revealed
  • Ideas for new guides or blog articles

Setting expectations for response times

If you host your own copy of this project and invite messages, consider stating clearly how often you check that inbox and what kinds of replies people can expect from you.

Offering clear boundaries to yourself as a creator

If you run your own version of this project, it’s okay to decide in advance which types of requests you are able to respond to and which ones you are not.

Being mindful of confidentiality

If you self-host and invite messages, you may want to remind visitors not to share highly sensitive details through simple contact forms.

Offering alternative reflection options

Some visitors may prefer to process what they learn privately rather than sending a message. You can gently suggest journaling prompts or conversations with trusted people as other ways to engage.