Say what matters
Goals, constraints, protected time, risk boundaries, and current reality become the operating context.
Personal Executive Governance OS
AI governance for your own behavior.
Define the constitution, goals, constraints, and authority. PEGO makes the next decision within those boundaries, returns one directive, and learns from what happened.
Goals, constraints, protected time, risk boundaries, and current reality become the operating context.
PEGO makes the next call and gives you one action with the reason, fallback, stop condition, and deferrals explicit.
Outcomes become evidence. PEGO reviews friction, benefit, and fit before trusting a pattern.
You already delegate behavior more than it feels like you do: to hunger, friction, calendar pressure, defaults, anxiety, habits, social context, and whatever is loudest in the moment.
PEGO gives that delegation a constitution. Instead of letting the near-term state choose by accident, it lets a governed AI system reason from your desired life, real constraints, current context, and authority boundaries before deciding what should happen next.
The goal is not to surrender judgment. You define what matters, what is off-limits, when PEGO must stop, and which decisions require review. PEGO carries more of the ongoing arbitration so you can act, object, and live in the present without continually re-litigating the future.
A good PEGO decision should make the next action better than the one your tired, hungry, distracted, or short-term self would have chosen alone.
I have 35 minutes, low energy, and I keep drifting between work, food, and home tasks. Evening protected time starts at 6.
Next directive: walk to the nearby store and buy only the two breakfast defaults already approved in your food plan. Stop after checkout. Do not add errands.
Reason: this protects tomorrow's first food decision, adds low-friction movement, and avoids expanding into work before protected time. Fallback: if the store is not viable, write the two items on the purchase list and stop.
Humans often act first and explain later. People move from environment, defaults, fatigue, timing, friction, and social context — then make sense of it afterward. Conscious reasoning matters, but it is not the only control surface for behavior.
PEGO is built for that. Rather than stop at rational advice, it reasons from long-range outcomes through strategy and constraints into directives that shape the conditions where action becomes likely — grocery defaults before meal choices, maintenance before an environment turns aversive, a walk timed for daylight and incidental contact.
A directive is judged by the behavior it is likely to produce, not only the task it names. Strategy stays ambitious; the next action must be executable from where you actually are.
Change tomorrow's default options before asking for today's willpower.
Small recurring upkeep before visual clutter becomes background irritation.
Movement, daylight, and neighborhood contact — one directive, several outcomes.
Clothing, supplies, or documents handled early to prevent day-of scrambling.
You bring goals, constraints, and where things actually stand. Specialist agents — finance, health, career, home, and the rest — each argue their own case. The council reconciles them into one decision; governance checks the call; PEGO returns the next directive; outcomes feed back in.
Environment and state are ongoing inputs, not a one-time setup step. Anticipation scans inspect upcoming events, seasonal maintenance, supplies, schedule conflicts, and recurring irritants before they become urgent. During the day, a weather change, completed directive, available time, or new concern can trigger fresh domain recommendations — and send the council back to work — without waiting for tomorrow's plan.
Council is where the agents meet — finance against health, career against exploration, what matters now against what can wait. It picks one directive worth acting on, not a pile of equal options. Disagreement isn't a bug to smooth over — it's an input the system records.
Governance check runs on the proposed directive before you act on it — not after. Low-risk actions can proceed within the authority you delegated. If risk, privacy, protected time, or impact crosses your limits, PEGO escalates: ask for your review, require explicit approval, or open a formal decision packet. A directive is not a blind order.
The reusable framework is separate from the private instance. Goals, finances, health, relationships, journals, directives, and outcomes belong in protected private storage.
PEGO can make decisions only within the authority you grant. High-impact financial, medical, legal, career, housing, or relationship decisions require explicit review.
Directives carry a reason, fallback, deferrals, stop condition, and next check-in. Outcomes are reviewed before the system treats a pattern as trusted.