Language
Intermediate Spanish Breakfast Club
Four intermediate speakers keeping Spanish in the morning routine, trading breakfast voice notes for four weeks.
The buddy system for trying new things.
Photos from the community
Find a group to explore your new hobby with. After a fixed time, choose to keep your group or find a new hobby.
Browse open clubs. Each one is built around a single hobby and runs for a fixed number of weeks.
Save your spot before the group fills. We hold it open until enough people have joined, then everyone starts together.
When the group is full, an organizer opens a small chat and introduces the members to each other.
Each group sets its own cadence. Pick the one that fits how often you can show up.
Language
Four intermediate speakers keeping Spanish in the morning routine, trading breakfast voice notes for four weeks.
Writing
Four writers answering a weekly prompt and trading honest feedback, building a real writing habit over eight weeks.
Cooking
Six first-time bakers raising a sourdough starter from flour and water to a first real loaf, together over four weeks.
Language
Six true beginners meeting two evenings a week to learn Spanish from scratch, little by little, over four weeks.
Music
Six new DJs trading one short mix a week, turning a solo bedroom habit into a crew that actually hears your sets, for four weeks.
Drawing
Six people drawing their cities from life, one kind of place a week, sharing the messy, real results for six weeks.
A 2026 word for an old idea: making things, learning slowly, living away from the feed.
Pick by what you need from one. Solo, hands-on, cheap, twenty-minutes-a-day: the angle matters more than the activity.
Yes.
There's nothing to log into. When the club ends, the chat ends with it.
A clear end date keeps the commitment small and easy to say yes to. When a club wraps up, you decide whether to run it back or try something new.
Both. Each club says which it is on its page. Online clubs meet over chat or a call; in person clubs meet somewhere local.