I spent thirty years scheduling other people's someday.
Maritime logistics doesn't leave room for the word. Every route, every shipment, every deadline has a date attached to it, and nobody asks the ship if it feels ready — you just go. I ran that world for three decades: ports, operations, schedules that had to hold whether I was tired or not.
Somewhere in those thirty years I noticed the strange part. The ships always left on time. I didn't.
The trip I kept meaning to take. The conversation I kept putting off. The version of my life I told myself I'd get to once things settled down — they never settled down, because "settled down" isn't a real date. It's a way of saying no without admitting it.
YOLO It. started as a question I couldn't put back down: what if you already know someday means never, and just haven't said it out loud?
So I built the thing I wished I'd had. Something that names exactly what you keep postponing, puts a real number on the time you have left, and turns that into a plan sized to your actual life — not a vision board, not a course, just the next 90 days.
I'm not a life coach. I spent three decades keeping cargo on schedule. Turns out that's decent training for keeping promises to yourself too.
If you've been waiting for the right time, here's what thirty years in logistics taught me: there isn't one. There's only the next departure. Take the Someday Audit and pick yours.
— Renato B., Founder