

It’s important to mention that although mymind is free, it is limited to 100 cards (individual items) but there is a paid version, and this offers you unlimited cards for a solid sum of $119 a year… so that is something you will have to consider - if you use it all day, every day, it is probably a wise investment. As well as just saving images, recipes, webpages, you can write notes directly into mymind, so you always have a mental note readily available. It’s a nice sentiment, and it actually works. Mymind cares about your privacy, so nothing within your extensions can be accessed by anyone else, they want to treat your new space as if they were simply your own thoughts.
Mymind review for free#
Just sign up for free and add the mymind extension to your browser (a small orange circle with a ‘+’ will appear in the top right of your screen, everytime you like something you see online, click this icon and it’ll be saved to mymind, and automatically, and securely categorised for you. We look at our current tools and ask ourselves why it’s done the way it is.” And finally, ‘How?’ - “There’s a lot of magic and some artificial intelligence, but let’s keep it simple for now… Everytime you find something you want to remember, you just save it to mymind.” So there you have it… (sort of) between their own explanation and the screenshots provided, we hope this clarifies things somewhat. For thinkers and doers who could use an extension of their mind.” ‘Why?’ - “because why not try something different? We’ve always approached product design this way. For those who move too fast to be bothered with folders, labels and systems. Thus, “Blue My Mind” proposes a unique approach to the young feminine universe, approaching surrealism and phantasy without ever putting aside crucial questions of the reality of adolescence.When you click on mymind’s website, you’ll be greeted by three questions (those of which you’ve probably asked yourself) - What? Why? And How? These prompts fully explain mymind’s mission, we won’t save you the trouble of the clicks but we will sum them up for you… by quoting the site itself, ‘What?’ - “mymind is for busy people. As an effect, she starts to question her own existence, her desires, her aspirations, diving in a deep existential reflection that seems to enclose a kafkian dimension.

The eagerness to experience even more extreme, even self-destructive experiences, arises as a mark of Mia’s violent metamorphosis. Gradually, the fable will embrace reality as Mia manifests her innermost desires, from the loss of her virginity to the need to expose herself to extreme experiences, such as the abusive consumption of alcohol, drugs, or the adrenaline of stealing in stores. And that’s what happens in the story of Blue My Mind.īrühlmann follows Mia’s path in this complicated transition phase, focusing on her inner conflict in a progressive abstraction of reality. Her body revealing a different metamorphosis from the other girls of her age is perhaps a metaphor for the weirdness that adolescents sometimes feel about themselves, that they try to get around by often using phantasy. During this troubled period of transition, there will be another transformation in her body that she is incapable of understanding and does not reveal to anyone, thus increasing the feeling of strangeness towards herself. However, Mia will not face these transformations like other teenage girls. Giana (Zoë Pastelle Holthuizen) is the ‘leader’ of the female group, who Mia will become closer to, and that will decisively influence her life perspective during this period.Īt the same time, many changes occur in Mia’s life, not only motivated by herself, such as the need to change her appearance and her behavior to impress her new friends, but also arising as natural phenomena of puberty, such as the first menstruation and the gradual discovery of sexual desire. She feels fascinated by their boldness, their style, the way they despise the rest of the class and impose their presence with a fearless dominance, not allowing anyone (not even their parents) to interfere in their freedom. Mia (interpreted by Luna Wedler) is a teenager who enters a new class in the middle of the school year, and soon struggles to integrate herself into a group of people she identifies herself with.

Lisa Brühlmann’s “Blue My Mind” is a coming of age that deals with pertinent issues of adolescence in a fablelike register, acquiring a form that is both beautiful and grotesque.

It is always difficult for a teenager to deal with the feeling of being ‘weird’.
