Whispers card: the intimate messaging experience for couples

Whispers is the card built for the messages you want to send but never quite find the right moment for. Here's how it's changing the way couples communicate.

There are things you want to say but don’t — not because you can’t find the words, but because the moment never feels quite right. Because it takes courage. Because in the everyday rhythm of a relationship, certain messages seem out of place.

Whispers exists for exactly those messages.

What Whispers is

Whispers is an interactive card built for whispers — those intimate, poetic, sensual, or simply true messages that someone wants to send their partner in a way that arrives correctly.

It’s not a chat. It’s not a voice note. It’s something that opens, is experienced, is felt — like a whisper in the ear, even when you’re miles apart.

What it’s actually for

Whispers solves a real problem in relationships: the difficulty of communicating certain dimensions of intimacy within everyday life. When you’re together, the “right moment” for certain things seems to never arrive. When you’re apart, the context is missing.

Whispers creates that context. It sends the message at the right moment — when your partner is alone, has a quiet minute, is ready to receive it.

Main uses:

  • Couples in a routine: breaking the ordinary with an unexpected, intimate message
  • Long-distance couples: creating emotional connection across a screen
  • Reconnection moments: after an argument, after time apart
  • Simple daily care: “I was thinking of you” said in the right way

The power of the format

A whisper written in a WhatsApp message is different from a whisper sent through Whispers. The format changes how it’s received: when you open something visual, with its own aesthetic and intention, the brain understands that what it’s about to read matters.

It’s the difference between a word said in passing and a word said while looking someone in the eyes.

How to use it best

Choose the right moment to send it. Not during work, not in the middle of a hundred notifications. Send a simple message first: “I have something for you — open it this evening.”

Write in the first person. Use “I feel,” “I think,” “I miss you” — not “you’re beautiful.” Personal messages are always more powerful than poetic abstractions.

Don’t over-explain. A whisper is concise. Its power is in precision, not length.

Use it regularly. Whispers works best not as an exceptional gesture, but as a practice — something that returns at intervals, that becomes part of the couple’s language.

What to write: examples

  • “This morning I woke up and my first thought was you. As always.”
  • “You are the place where I feel most like myself.”
  • “I watch you sleep sometimes and I can’t understand how I got this lucky.”
  • “I miss you in a way that isn’t urgency — it’s presence. Like when the light goes out of a room.”
  • “You have something that puts me at peace. I don’t know what it is. I don’t want to find out — I just want to keep it.”

Discover Whispers →