Still whispering “Thirty days hath September” at 45?
Good. That rhyme’s doing more for your productivity than your apps ever did.
Let’s be real.
You didn’t open Google Calendar to check if this month has 30 days.
You whispered a kiddie rhyme in your head:
“Thirty days hath September,
April, June, and November…”
You’re not crazy. You’re functional.
That rhyme outlived your planner.
It outlived Microsoft Outlook.
And it’s outlasting Google Calendar, too.

Why It Still Wins
Most productivity tools assume ideal conditions:
- Stable connection
- Zero distractions
- Perfect recall
- Unlimited time to open an app
But remote workers, nomads, and freelancers don’t live in ideal conditions.
Context changes fast.
Connectivity fails.
Mental load stays maxed out.
And that’s exactly when your brain reaches for something frictionless.
Not an app. A rhyme.
What a Kiddie Rhyme Actually Does
This isn’t nostalgia.
This is procedural memory—aka mental automation.
You didn’t open a tool.
You didn’t type a query.
You ran a script.
The same way your body ties a shoelace without thinking.
Or your fingers hit Ctrl+S without planning.
That rhyme became a system—one that still runs offline, under pressure, and without training.
Remote Work Needs More of This, Not More Apps
Let’s be blunt:
- Notion won’t save your day
- Trello doesn’t reduce your cognitive load
- And syncing five tools just creates more failure points
People don’t need better tools.
They need mental systems that don’t break.
That childhood rhyme?
It’s a zero-maintenance, offline-first, fully embedded workflow.
And that’s what most “productivity” software can’t match.
Build More Systems Like That
You already trust that rhyme.
Now steal the pattern.
Here’s how to rebuild your workflow around the same logic:
1. Hardcode Repeatables
If you do it often, burn it in.
- “30 days hath…” = fast calendar check
- “Lefty-loosey…” = gear setup shortcut
- Post-it colors = instant task triage
Muscle memory beats feature lists.
2. Link Old Rhymes to Modern Needs
Make these childish-sounding scripts your tactical edge:
- “Red, yellow, green” = priority mapping
- “I before E…” = editing crutches
- “Righty-tighty” = tool direction memory
The trick isn’t remembering the rhyme.
It’s mapping it to something useful.
3. Teach This to Your Team
If you lead a remote team or manage VAs—this matters.
Don’t just train tools.
Train fallback logic.
Because when the software fails (and it will), the shared mental models are what carry the work forward.
This Post Will Outlive Your App Stack Too
This isn’t just a productivity tip.
It’s proof that low-tech, high-reliability systems matter—especially in a remote environment.
You’re not clinging to the past.
You’re proving that the most resilient tools are the ones your brain already trusts.
So keep whispering the rhyme.
It’s older than your apps.
It’s more reliable than your internet.
And it’s not going anywhere.
Want more posts like this?
- Ctrl+Alt+Del Your Workflow (Upcoming)
- Sticky Notes Beat Your App Stack (Coming Soon)
- One Notebook, One System (Coming Soon)
Final Word
If you’re still whispering playground rhymes to survive the workday, you’re not behind.
You’re ahead of every software developer trying to rebuild what your brain already knows how to do.
Don’t upgrade it.
Embed it.

