AI-Powered Clarity
AI recognizes emotions, context, and patterns to help you see the situation more clearly.

AI-guided conversation
Everlight Love listens to both perspectives, names what matters most, and guides each person through thoughtful questions toward greater understanding.
No login to watch · no card · conversations stay private
One space. Two perspectives. One attentive coach.
Both people join by link and answer in their own voice. The AI coach listens, reflects, and asks questions that help them truly hear one another.
AI recognizes emotions, context, and patterns to help you see the situation more clearly.
The process draws on Nonviolent Communication, psychology, and empathic dialogue.
The programmed AI coach asks questions, listens to each answer, and analyzes it to help release built-up emotions, express needs, and shape a new strategy together. The conversation leads to deeper understanding, a stronger relationship, and a new quality of love.
The conversation stays between the participants, who remain in control of the pace.
The conversation leads to deeper understanding, a stronger relationship, and a new quality of love.
Choose your room
Each room is a different kind of conversation — the same coach, the same NVC process.
Couples, parents, co-parents, and other two-adult conversations — each from your own phone, in one guided space.
A conversation for two, each from your own device — hear the need beneath the words.
Two adults talk about parenting — no child in the session, just one clear shared step.
Two parents, two homes — agree on what the child needs without returning to the old relationship.
You're just getting to know each other and something's already off — say plainly what each of you wants.
You came back because you want to try again — rebuild the bond and repair what broke.
Part with dignity: honor what was good between you, and say goodbye with respect.
Sit down together, each from your own phone, and name what you've never said out loud.
Something in the family has weighed for years — name it calmly, both present, with a guide.
Something with a neighbour is wearing on you both — agree together on what can change.
Something between you at work keeps grating — name it plainly, both present, before it grows.
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Everlight holds the two adult perspectives and gently makes room for the child or teenager's needs.
Only rooms where the child or teenager is actually present in the session — tender with a little one, respectful with a teen.
then return to yourself
After family, children, and partners, your own voice still matters: what you need before you step back into the world.
Only you and the coach. One name, one voice — work through it at your own pace, no one else needs to be here.
Furious? Let it all out, no filter — the coach is on your side and holds it right there with you.
Reconcile the voices arguing inside you, and leave with compassion for yourself.
Work through your side of the relationship when your partner isn't here: what you feel, what to ask for.
A friend vanished or hurt you and you'll never talk it out — process it calmly and let it go.
Something real ended — honor what was, and say goodbye to the rest on your own terms.
Set down a weight you've carried for years — for your own peace, not their absolution.
Meet yourself with the same kindness you'd give a friend — and feel the relief.
Make room for the loss — gently, without rushing, and not alone.
Name a power-imbalanced relationship clearly, and get your feet back under you — with peace.
Rehearse that one dreaded conversation: what you feel, what you need, what you'll ask for.
the Everlight Love mission
For partners, exes, parents, children, friends, teams, and people who want to live with more understanding. We are looking for sponsors, strategists, and changemakers ready to grow a movement in consciousness, communication, and empathy.
Everlight Love helps in the present moment: when there is tension, silence, blame, longing, or emotional overload. It guides people toward words that can actually be heard across couples, parents and children, friends, families, and the relationship with oneself.
for sponsors · strategists · changemakers

They show that children can express needs in a light, imaginative way, while parents can name limits, exhaustion, and care without turning the moment into a fight.

Monika Laskus, Aya, is a dreamer and visionary who has poured enormous effort, belief, and heart into this project. Now she invites sponsors to help this idea heal everyday conversations at scale.

They represent transformation in adult relationships: romantic, family, friendship, work, and the quiet relationship each person has with themselves.
✦ 11 real sentences ✦
Each scene is a sentence someone really said — and a short NVC reframe. Find yours and walk into the garden.
What you get from one conversation
after a breakup, after silent days, after arguments
in your life and relationship
that no longer serve you
the kind that connects, doesn't divide
A Letter from the Garden to read, listen to, and download as a PDF
EVERLIGHT LOVE · NVC FRAMEWORK
Not a quiz, not a checkbox. A guide who pauses, listens, helps you name emotions and needs.
Marshall Rosenberg's proven framework. Four steps: observation, feeling, need, request.
Every strong emotion has a place — and doesn't have to explode. The conversation moves at the pace both of you are ready for.
After the session you have a PDF, practices, a pillars chart. It doesn't disappear when you close the app.
Free tool
A small tool that works instantly. Translate your words into NVC and hear how a calmer conversation can sound.
NVC translator
Glimpses of what unfolds here — illustrative stories, not collected named reviews.
“For three years we passed each other in the hallway like strangers. In the conversation I finally said the thing I'd never dared: “I miss you, even when you're sitting right beside me.” He started to cry. The Letter from the Garden named what we'd both been afraid to touch — and that night we fell asleep holding hands again.”
Eve and Tom
Couple · 11 years · after years of silence
“After he betrayed me I thought there was nothing left to talk about. But when I heard him speak from his shame instead of his excuses, something in me loosened. I didn't forgive right away — but for the first time I wanted to try. The Letter didn't pretend the wound disappears; it showed me we could walk on, carrying it together.”
Joanna, 38
Couple · after a breach of trust
“My daughter and I had been shouting at each other for months. Here, in separate conversations, I heard a sentence that disarmed me: she wasn't angry — she was terrified I'd give up on her. When we read the Letter together, for the first time in ages we simply held each other, without a single word about who was right.”
Beth and Suzie (16)
Parent and teenager
“My mum died before I could tell her the thing that mattered most. In the conversation I was allowed to speak to her as if she were still listening. I said “thank you” and “I'm sorry,” and for the first time since the funeral I could breathe. The Letter was the goodbye I never got — and I could finally set it down.”
Peter, 47
Solo · grief and goodbye
“For twenty years I blamed myself for one decision. In a solo conversation I heard my younger self — a frightened girl doing the best she could. The Letter wrote me a sentence I'd never have said to myself: “You did the best you knew how.” I walked away lighter by a weight I'd carried half my life.”
Maggie, 44
Solo · forgiving myself
“My sister and I hadn't spoken since Dad died — seven years of silence about an inheritance that was really about love. When I heard her side of that day, I understood we'd both felt abandoned. The Letter helped me write her the first message in years. She called back within ten minutes.”
Hannah, 52
Estranged siblings
“We broke up in anger and for a year couldn't even manage a “hello.” In the conversation, each of us alone, we saw it was never about blame — it was two kinds of loneliness. The Letter didn't sew us back together, but it gave us peace. Now we can wish each other well and actually mean it.”
Ola and Michael
Former partners · closure
“After the divorce, every conversation about our son ended in war. Here, each of us speaking only for ourselves, we heard the same sentence: “I just want him to feel safe.” The Letter reminded us we're still his parents, not opponents. For the first time we planned the holidays without raising our voices.”
Karolina and Adam
Co-parents after divorce · for the child
Stories from the Garden — illustrative, composite vignettes of what this path can hold. These are not verified testimonials from specific customers; the names and situations are example characters. User privacy is our priority.
Have another question? Email info@everlightlove.com — we reply within 24h.