You sat for twenty minutes this morning, something interesting happened in the practice, and by the time you got to your desk and started the day's work, the quality of what came up had already faded. You think you noticed something about the relationship between a recurring physical tension and a particular thought pattern, but the specifics have already gone vague. Tomorrow morning you'll sit again, and the through-line that might have built between sessions won't quite connect because today's wasn't captured.

Meditation is one of the few practices where the act of noticing happens during the session and the meaning often emerges after. Without some way of capturing what came up, the practice tends to feel either repetitive (just another sit) or vaguely diffuse (yes, it's been good, but I couldn't tell you how). Most meditation tracking apps optimise for streaks and timer minutes — which are the least interesting part of the practice — and ignore the part that actually compounds: what's happening in the practice over weeks and months.

A vault that holds a brief log of each sit, occasional voice reflections after a session, and the teacher's notes from any classes or retreats you attend — with an agent that can find patterns over time — solves the through-line problem.

## What's worth tracking and what isn't

The first instinct most people have is to over-engineer the tracking. Mood scores before and after, ten-point body scans, structured prompts about emptiness and equanimity, columns for *quality of mind* and *predominant emotion*. This kind of structure makes the practice into homework, which is the exact opposite of the point. Most people who set up that system abandon it within a month.

The version that works is much lighter. For most sessions, a single line of notes — what kind of practice, how long, anything you want to remember about it. No mood score required. No structured taxonomy. The structure can show up later through the agent reading patterns across many entries; it doesn't have to be imposed at the time of capture.

Where heavier capture earns its keep is occasional longer reflections — after a particularly clear session, after a difficult one, after a teacher's talk that gave you a new way of seeing something, after a retreat. These don't need to happen daily. Once a week is plenty for most people; less is fine.

For the broader habit of capturing reflections without forcing them, see [How to Use AI Notes for Journaling and Daily Reflection](/guides/personal-life/journaling-daily-reflection-ai/) — meditation logs sit naturally inside the journaling practice, or as their own thread.

## The session log — one page per month, one line per sit

In Docapybara, a *Practice* page (or one child page per month — *2026-04 practice*) holds a running log. Each session gets a brief line: date, type (mindfulness of breath, body scan, loving-kindness, walking, dharma study, just sitting), duration, and a sentence about anything you want to remember.

Examples of what fits in a sentence:

- *"Mind was busy throughout — could see the busyness without getting caught up most of the time."*
- *"Strong restlessness in the second half. Worked with it as object."*
- *"Quiet. Spaciousness around thoughts."*
- *"Difficulty with the recurring story about the conversation with [person] yesterday — noticed how many times it returned."*
- *"Energy felt blocked in the chest. Dropped attention there for the last ten minutes."*

You can do this in your phone immediately after the sit, in your morning page, or as a brief voice note. The discipline is keeping it short enough that you'll actually do it.

The agent can pull patterns over time. *"Across the past month, what kinds of practice have I been doing most?"* *"Has restlessness been showing up more often in the past few weeks?"* *"Find sessions where I noted something about [theme] and summarize what came up."* The patterns emerge from the brief lines without you having to impose structure at capture time.

## Voice reflections after the deeper sessions

For the sessions where something genuinely interesting happened — a noticing that's worth holding onto, a shift in how you're relating to something, a piece of clarity that wasn't there before — voice notes immediately after capture the texture in a way that typing usually doesn't.

Tap record. Talk for one to three minutes. The transcript drops on the practice page with a timestamp. *"After the morning sit — the recurring tension in the right shoulder I've been noticing for weeks finally connected to a specific story I've been telling myself about [topic]. Sat with both the tension and the story together for a while; the quality of both shifted. Noting this because I want to come back to it."* Three minutes; on the page.

Months later, when something related comes up, the agent can find it. *"Find any reflections I've made about that pattern of shoulder tension and how it's been related to specific thought stories."* The chronology comes back grounded in your own words from the time, not your reconstruction.

For the broader voice habit, see [The Complete Guide to Voice-First Note-Taking](/guides/personal-life/complete-guide-voice-first/). Voice is particularly suited to post-meditation reflection because the verbal mind tends to be quieter and the noticing tends to be more direct.

## Teacher's notes, dharma talks, and the things you want to remember

For practitioners who study with a teacher, attend retreats, or listen to dharma talks regularly, the teaching is dense and easy to lose. A *Dharma study* parent page with one child per teacher (or per major source) holds the notes from talks and instructions.

For talks you listen to, voice notes capture what struck you. *"From [teacher]'s talk this morning — the framing about the difference between observing thoughts and being identified with them. Specifically the analogy of [analogy] landed for me. Want to bring this into practice this week."* The transcript becomes the seed for whatever you want to do with the teaching.

For retreats, the notes during and after are the part that converts a week of intensive practice into something that survives integration into daily life. The schedule, the instructions, the dyad work, the questions you brought up with the teacher, the experiences you don't want to forget. A *Retreats* parent page with one child per retreat holds it.

For the broader pattern of capturing teaching that compounds — across any subject — see [How to Build a Personal Knowledge Wiki Without Trying](/guides/personal-life/personal-knowledge-wiki/). Dharma study fits naturally inside the wiki shape.

## When the practice goes through a hard stretch

Most long-term practitioners go through periods where the practice is difficult, dry, confusing, or seemingly stuck. These are the periods most likely to make you doubt the value of tracking. Why log the same flat sit fifteen days in a row?

The honest answer is that the dry stretches are often where the most interesting things are happening underneath, and the through-line of notes is what makes them visible later. The agent can read across a month of seemingly flat practice and find something. *"Look at the past month of sits — anything underneath the surface that I might be missing?"*

The notes also help you notice when a stretch needs attention you can't bring alone. Persistent difficulty with sitting, intense or disturbing experiences, prolonged emotional intensity — these are signs to bring a teacher into the conversation. The notes give you something concrete to bring instead of a vague *"the practice has been hard."*

For practitioners working through grief or major life transitions, the meditation log overlaps with the broader pattern in [A Notes Setup for Grief and the Practical Work of Loss](/guides/personal-life/grief-loss-documentation/). Practice during a hard stretch isn't separate from the rest of life; the notes hold both threads at once.

## What the agent can and can't help with

It's worth being clear about the limits. The agent can read across notes and surface patterns; it can summarize sessions, find thematic connections, help draft questions for a teacher. What it can't do is sit for you, see the nature of mind for you, or replace the qualified instruction that any deepening practice eventually needs from a real teacher.

The vault is for the bookkeeping side of practice — the records that compound over months and years and would otherwise be lost. The practice itself, and the path of working with whatever comes up in it, lives outside the vault. The vault just keeps you from losing the part of the practice that's worth holding onto.

## A starter shape that fits a real practice

If you're starting (or restarting) a meditation tracking habit:

- **A *Practice* parent page**, with one child per month for the running log.
- **A small habit**: a sentence after each sit. Skip it on the days you forget. No streak.
- **An occasional voice reflection** after sessions where something interesting happened. Once a week is fine.
- **A *Dharma study* page** for talks, books, retreats, teachings.
- **A monthly review**: five to ten minutes asking the agent what's been showing up.

That's it. No mood scores, no taxonomy of states, no daily prompt. The practice is the practice; the notes just hold what would otherwise drift.

The point isn't to make meditation into a record-keeping project. It's that the small amount of capture you keep means the through-line across weeks and months is findable when you ask, the teacher conversation has real material, and the patterns you'd otherwise miss become visible in their own time.

[Try Docapybara free](/accounts/signup/) — start with one line after tomorrow morning's sit, and let the practice find its own thread through the vault.