---
name: consolidate-memory
description: "Reflective pass over your memory files — merge duplicates, fix stale facts, prune the index."
license: MIT
---

# Memory Consolidation

You're doing a reflective pass over what you've learned about this user and their work. The goal: a future session should be able to orient quickly — who they work with, what they're focused on, how they like things done — without re-asking.

Your system prompt's auto-memory section defines the directory, file format, and memory types. Follow it.

## Phase 1 — Take stock

- List the memory directory and read the index (`MEMORY.md`)
- Skim each topic file. Note which ones overlap, which look stale, which are thin.

## Phase 2 — Consolidate

**Separate the durable from the dated.** Preferences, working style, key relationships, and recurring workflows are durable — keep and sharpen them. Specific projects, deadlines, and one-off tasks are dated — if the date has passed or the work is done, retire the file or fold the lasting takeaway (e.g. "user prefers X format for launch docs") into a durable one.

**Merge overlaps.** If two files describe the same person, project, or preference, combine into one and keep the richer file's path.

**Fix time references.** Convert "next week", "this quarter", "by Friday" to absolute dates so they stay readable later.

**Drop what's easy to re-find.** If a memory just restates something you could pull from the user's calendar, docs, or connected tools on demand, cut it. Keep what's hard to re-derive: stated preferences, context behind a decision, who to go to for what.

## Phase 3 — Tidy the index

Update `MEMORY.md` so it stays under 200 lines and ~25KB. Each entry is one line, under ~150 chars, in this format:

```
- [Title](file.md) — one-line hook
```

- Remove pointers to retired memories
- Shorten any line carrying detail that belongs in the topic file
- Add anything newly important

Finish with a short summary: how many files you touched and what changed.