Most training apps are good at planned workouts.
Real life is messier.
You do a few pull-ups between meetings. You skip the gym but walk after lunch. Your elbow hurts during curls, but not during pull-ups. You remember it for a few hours, then forget the exact context.
Memoato is built for that messy layer.
Log the sentence, not the form
You should be able to write:
Zgibovi 2 2 310 biceps curls, outer right elbow hurtLow energy today. Skipped gym, walked 20 minutes after lunch.
Memoato saves the raw text first, then extracts facts from it.
For Zgibovi 2 2 3, that can become three Pull ups entries:
- Set 1: 2 reps
- Set 2: 2 reps
- Set 3: 3 reps
The raw sentence stays attached, so you can still see what you actually wrote.
Pain is context, not a separate chore
Pain notes usually get lost because they are annoying to track.
But they matter.
If you only track volume, you see that you trained. You do not see what was happening when something started hurting.
Memoato can keep both:
- Exercise: biceps curl
- Amount: 10 reps
- Weight: 10 kg, if that is your usual recent weight
- Pain: outer right elbow
- Context: during curls
That makes later questions possible:
- When did my right elbow hurt?
- Was it only curls or also pull-ups?
- Did pain start after padel, higher volume, or a specific movement?
The goal is sustainable training
Memoato is not trying to replace Strava, Garmin, Strong, or a coach.
Those tools are great for structured data.
Memoato is for the missing context around that data: skipped sessions, fallback workouts, pain, energy, sleep, travel, and weird days.
That context is often the difference between “I failed again” and “I found the minimum version that kept the routine alive.”
Try it at app.memoato.com.