Questions come from reviewed sets for softer starts, repair, appreciation, and pressure checks.
Preview the kind of question UYB may ask.
UYB uses reviewed question packs to help people start gently, repair carefully, appreciate each other, and name pressure without turning the app into advice.
These are examples, not a test.
Use this receipt before reading example prompts. The question page shows reviewed examples only. It does not ask for private answers, generate advice, start a journal, or judge anyone.
This public page never needs journal text, drafts, reveal text, invite links, or account details.
Reading examples does not create a journal, notify another person, choose a question for you, or open a reveal.
Question previews are product education only. They are not therapy, crisis care, legal advice, medical advice, diagnosis, moral judgment, or a replacement for consent and trusted real-world help.
Pick the feeling before you pick a question.
Use this small chooser when examples feel like too much. Start from the moment you are in, then let Question Studio preview reviewed prompts that fit.
Use this when the goal is one gentle answer, not a huge talk.
RepairSomething hurt and needs care.Use this when the prompt should name impact without turning the room into a trial.
PressureOutside stress is entering the relationship.Use this for money, chores, school, work, rules, or exhaustion.
AppreciationWe need to remember care.Use this when connection, gratitude, or getting to know each other matters most.
Not sureLet UYB surprise you softly.Use this when choosing perfectly feels like pressure. The preview still uses reviewed prompts only.
This chooser is public product guidance. It does not generate a diagnosis, choose for the other person, start a journal, send an invite, read private writing, or decide who is right.
Same care, different wording.
UYB keeps the emotional job clear while changing the tone for the person using it. A younger user should not feel tested, and an adult should not feel talked down to.
Questions stay short, concrete, and kind. They ask what happened, what helped, or what felt hard without asking a child to explain everything.
Prompts give teens room to name what they want understood without forcing a big reveal, a perfect answer, or a public performance.
Questions help adults name responsibility, repair, stress, appreciation, and needs without turning the journal into a debate.
Question wording can support a conversation, but it cannot replace consent, supervision, therapy, crisis care, or trusted real-world help.
Start softer at home
Lower-pressure prompts for parents, kids, and teens who need a first sentence, not a lecture.
What would feel like a softer way to begin?
What would make it easier to be honest with me?
What is one small thing you wish felt different between us this week?
Repair without turning it into proof
Questions that help two people name what hurt without making the reveal a courtroom.
What did you need from me that was hard to ask for?
What are you afraid I might take the wrong way?
What would help us come back to each other softer?
Before you share the hard thing
Prompts for pressure, worry, and the kind of honesty that needs a calmer shape.
Where did you feel misunderstood?
What do you need more of from us right now?
What are you scared will happen if you say what you really need?
Get to know each other gently
Light questions for care, memory, and connection without forcing a deep talk.
What is your comfort movie, song, or food?
What is one adventure we should go on someday?
What made you feel included?
Use one question inside a private journal.
Both people get the same question. The reveal opens only after both people save their side.