Financial coordination system
Your money.
One number.
What you can spend right now without breaking any future obligation. Calculated from your real accounts. Always honest.
$247
spendable until Friday
Sound familiar?
You are smart. Probably smarter than most. You can hold entire systems in your head, see patterns nobody else sees, build things that amaze people.
And yet. Numbers evaporate in your mind. The bill you paid last month? Gone. The subscription you meant to cancel? Still running. The car insurance due date? You nearly lost your coverage because you were deep in something that actually matters to you.
You run out of money for groceries while your brain is busy saving the world. You hyperfocus on a project for six hours and surface to find three overdraft alerts. You know you make enough. You just cannot make the numbers stay.
You might be saving the world. But who is going to save you when something as basic as money is a tripping hazard every single month?
The Wampum.
Created by a neurodivergent person, for other neurodivergent people.
How it works
Every dollar has a job
Before you ever see a number, the system has already sorted your money into three zones.
$1,920
Mortgage, insurance, utilities. Already spoken for. Locked away where you cannot accidentally touch it.
$680
Savings goals, kid weekends, the annual car registration you always forget. Protected until you need it.
$247
What is left. The one number on the home screen. Spend freely. No alarms, no guilt, no math.
The Bloodhound
It traces where your money actually went
You sent $80 to Venmo. Normal apps shrug and call it 'Transfer.' The Wampum follows the trail to the actual restaurant, the actual merchant, the actual purchase.
Your language
Colors, time, and stories instead of spreadsheets
Green means go. Amber means careful. Fill bars instead of percentages. 'Spendable until Friday' instead of a date. Your financial future told the way your brain actually plans.
What-if
Should I buy this?
Type an amount. Instantly see your number after the spend. 'You are fine. Spend it.' or 'This would put you in the red.' No math. Just an answer.
Co-pilot
A second pair of eyes, not a controlling hand
Invite your partner or therapist to see what you see. They support your decisions. They cannot move your money, override your choices, or hide anything from you.
You are not bad with money.
Your brain just works differently. So does this.
Open the app