honeyletter
daily
∙ 7am et ∙
Approved
for Mornings
Honey jar with dipper, wildflowers, and a heart-sealed envelope
honeyletter
sweet news, for once

Five stories, three minutes, no doom.

Delivered Mon–Fri at 7am
✻ Check your inbox. We just sent a confirmation link. Click it and your first letter lands the next weekday at 7am ET.

A daily good-news email worth opening. Built for the morning that needs to land differently.

No card, no catch.
real readers
One of my “must open” emails each day.

honeyletter has become one of my “must open” emails each day. Five genuinely good and interesting stories cut through the nonstop negativity and leave me feeling better after reading them.

— Eric, South Carolina
A great reminder of the good going on in the world.

During times when life feels busy and the world feels heavy honeyletter was able to help start my day off right with a great reminder of the good going on in the world. We can all use that little reminder!

— Julia, New York
from the editor

I'm tired. The news is bad and I keep reading it anyway, which is how I learned the word “doomscroll” applied to me too.

I'd had this idea since 2022. A daily letter that wasn't doom. Five small things from the world, not bad ones. I thought about it constantly and never actually built it.

Then one morning my daughter was asleep on my chest at 5am and I was scrolling, and I'd had enough. I put the phone down and thought to myself, what can I do?

A few weeks later, honeyletter started arriving in inboxes. Five stories every weekday. Curated, edited, and shipped by me personally.

Glad you're here.

The Editor
01
five stories,
three minutes,
at seven.

A taste of honeyletter.

Three stories from recent letters. Five like these land in inboxes every weekday at 7am.

02
First
Class
why honeyletter

Because the news is too much right now.

01 · Short

Five stories. Three minutes.

Five stories. Maybe 700 words total. Short enough to read between meetings or over coffee, warm enough to actually land.

02 · Real

Crafted, not aggregated.

Most good-news sites scrape headlines and slap them into listicles. honeyletter is read, picked, and edited by a human. The saccharine ones get killed, only the stories that would actually move a tired person at 7am make it in.

03 · Honest

No doom, no clickbait.

The world has plenty of bad news. honeyletter doesn't add to it. No politics, no tragedy bait, no "you won't believe what happened next." Just five stories: Nature, Kindness, Medicine, People, Progress — read in full and chosen by editorial judgement, not engagement metrics.

03
a few questions

You might be wondering.

What's actually in the letter?

Only good news. Five short stories about kind, hopeful, quietly remarkable things happening in the world. Never politics, never tragedy, never "here's what's wrong." About 700 words total. — three minutes of reading, the kind you can finish before the kettle boils.

When does it arrive?

7am ET, Monday through Friday. Weekends are yours.

How is this different from other good-news letters?

Most are aggregators: headlines scraped into a digest. honeyletter is read in full and edited by a human who kills anything saccharine, anything that doesn't feel right, anything that wouldn't land on a depleted reader at 7am. It's slower, shorter, and made for people who are worn out.

Will it come at 3am if I'm up?

No. It arrives at 7am ET. But it lives in your inbox, so when you reach for your phone in the small hours, yesterday's letter is right there.

Can I forward it to a friend?

Please do. Forwarding is the only marketing honeyletter is doing.