About us

Plenixario began with a simple question that many people recognize: why does even a well-written task list sometimes fail to make the day feel calmer? Our team started building this course after our own experience with overloaded schedules, constantly moved tasks, and the feeling that a plan existed, but did not fully match real life. We saw how people tried to fit study, work, household duties, rest, and personal tasks into one day, often without a clear structure. That is why Plenixario was created as a learning space about time, rhythm, and daily decisions without pressure or loud claims.
Our approach grew from a practical search: how can planning become a source of clear support rather than strict control? We began studying why some tasks fit better in the morning, why small actions can interrupt attention, how pauses influence the shape of a schedule, and how repeated actions can become the base of personal order. Instead of offering one universal system, we created a course that helps each learner observe their own pace, distribute workload, and gradually build a planning structure that feels usable.
The learning logic of the course was shaped by Vitalijus Karpovicius — Routine Design Specialist. Vitalijus has spent more than 8 years working with daily routine organization, study-time planning, and personal schedule design. His background includes work with educational studios, small remote learning teams, private learning projects, and course creators who wanted to make their materials more structured and easier for learners to follow. Vitalijus does not see routine as a rigid set of rules. For him, routine is a sequence of small daily decisions that helps a person see the day more clearly.
Vitalijus’s interest in planning did not begin with theory, but with personal experience. During his studies and early work, he often faced the same problem: the task list was long, yet the day still felt scattered. He tried complex tables, detailed schedules, and large note systems, but later understood that many people need something simpler: a structure they can repeat, adjust, and shape around different circumstances. This experience became the foundation of his approach to routine design.
In his previous work, Vitalijus created daily planning maps, weekly review templates, task-sorting exercises, study block materials, and gentle reset methods for returning to order after a pause. He has worked with more than 2,400 learners through educational groups, workshops, and self-study programs. His materials have been used by teams that needed to better connect learning, work processes, and personal time without adding unnecessary pressure.
For Plenixario, Vitalijus built the course foundation around three ideas: each day has its own rhythm, tasks carry different weight, and a useful plan needs room for change. That is why the course gives attention to observation, task categories, daily frames, pauses, and evening review. We created this course to help people better understand their time and build a schedule that reflects real life, not just a neat list on paper.