Broken day
Repaired
A broken day, repaired after the fact.
Skip credits handle the days you can see coming. Repair credits handle the ones you can't — the day you genuinely forgot, the day the reminder didn't fire, the day everything just fell apart and the habit slipped through the cracks. A repair credit lets you go back and mark that day as repaired after the fact, so a single lapse doesn't unravel weeks or months of a chain you actually built. It's intentionally scarcer than a skip credit and renews monthly rather than weekly, because it's meant for genuine exceptions rather than routine planning — if you find yourself reaching for it every week, that's usually a sign the habit's chain mode or schedule needs adjusting, not that you need more repairs. The underlying belief is straightforward: resetting someone's entire chain to zero over one bad day is a design choice that makes people quit, not a neutral consequence of "the rules." A repaired day stays visibly distinct in the chain's history — it's not hidden or pretended away, just no longer treated as a break. Premium accounts get a larger monthly allotment; free accounts get a smaller one, but the principle is the same across tiers: one missed day is a footnote, not an ending.