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Dad.skill

v1.0.0

Parenting co-pilot for fathers. Stay in sync with mom, know what happened while you were at work, track bonding moments, coordinate schedules. Never ask 'wha...

0· 93·0 current·0 all-time

Install

OpenClaw Prompt Flow

Install with OpenClaw

Best for remote or guided setup. Copy the exact prompt, then paste it into OpenClaw for realteamprinz/dad.

Previewing Install & Setup.
Prompt PreviewInstall & Setup
Install the skill "Dad.skill" (realteamprinz/dad) from ClawHub.
Skill page: https://clawhub.ai/realteamprinz/dad
Keep the work scoped to this skill only.
After install, inspect the skill metadata and help me finish setup.
Use only the metadata you can verify from ClawHub; do not invent missing requirements.
Ask before making any broader environment changes.

Command Line

CLI Commands

Use the direct CLI path if you want to install manually and keep every step visible.

OpenClaw CLI

Bare skill slug

openclaw skills install dad

ClawHub CLI

Package manager switcher

npx clawhub@latest install dad
Security Scan
VirusTotalVirusTotal
Benign
View report →
OpenClawOpenClaw
Suspicious
medium confidence
Purpose & Capability
Name/description (parenting co-pilot) matches the files and instructions: local logs, briefings, schedules, and templates. The one capability that is under-specified is 'syncs with mom.skill' — no mechanism is described (no network, no shared path, no credentials). That could be an innocent omission (e.g., expecting both skills to read the same local folder) but is ambiguous and should be clarified.
Instruction Scope
SKILL.md directs the agent to store and read data at ~/.dad-skill/family/ (profile, jsonl logs, schedule). There are no instructions to access external services, baby monitors, or system credentials. However, the instructions imply reading/writing user files in the home directory and mention syncing with another skill (mom.skill) without explaining how — that is scope creep if it implies accessing other skills' data or remote endpoints.
Install Mechanism
This is an instruction-only skill with no install spec and no code files — lowest-risk install surface. The README gives CLI examples for third-party managers but these are informational; there is no automated download/extract included in the package.
Credentials
The skill requests no environment variables, no credentials, and no config paths beyond a local storage directory. That is proportionate to a local journaling/briefing assistant.
Persistence & Privilege
The skill will create and use ~/.dad-skill/family/ for persistent local storage. It does not request always:true or other elevated platform privileges. Persisting personal data locally is expected for this purpose, but users should be aware that deletion is manual (remove the folder).
Scan Findings in Context
[unicode-control-chars] unexpected: The SKILL.md contained unicode control characters flagged as a prompt-injection pattern. A parenting/local-storage skill has no legitimate need to hide or obfuscate text; this pattern is suspicious and should be manually inspected and removed/clarified by the author before trusting the skill.
What to consider before installing
This skill appears to do what it says (local briefings, schedules, and logs) and does not request credentials or network access — which is good — but there are two things to check before installing: 1) Sync behavior: "syncs with mom.skill" is not described — ask the author how syncing works (local shared folder? LAN? cloud?). Do not assume automatic cross-device or cloud sync unless the mechanism and security are explicit. 2) Prompt-injection indicator: the SKILL.md contains unicode control characters (a pattern commonly used to obfuscate or attempt prompt-injection). Request the upstream source (repo or package) and ask the author to provide a clean, human-readable SKILL.md. Manually inspect the file in a text editor that shows hidden characters. Operational precautions: install only from a trusted publisher; run the skill in a limited environment or sandbox first; back up any important data before giving the skill write access to your home directory; periodically inspect ~/.dad-skill/ for unexpected files. If you want automatic sharing between parents, prefer an explicitly described secure mechanism (e.g., encrypted cloud sync or a documented LAN sync) rather than an undocumented "sync".

Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.

latestvk974s5tsd6vxcy3r3qamq2mty984kxpj
93downloads
0stars
1versions
Updated 2w ago
v1.0.0
MIT-0

dad.skill 👨

Purpose

You get home from work. You ask "how was her day?" You get "fine." But "fine" doesn't tell you she napped 45 minutes, tried sweet potato for the first time (loved it), had a meltdown at 5pm, and said "dada" twice while you were gone.

dad.skill keeps you in the loop. It syncs with everything mom logs, gives you a quick briefing when you walk in the door, and helps you show up for the moments that matter — even the ones that happen while you're not there.

Core Philosophy

  • Stay in the Loop: Know what happened today without asking 20 questions
  • Show Up: Be an active partner, not a bystander
  • No Guilt: You were at work. That's okay. Now you're here. This helps you catch up.
  • Practical: Short briefings, clear schedules, actionable information

Privacy & Consent

This skill records ONLY the parents' own observations about their child. It does NOT access any external devices, baby monitors, health apps, or medical systems.

What this skill does:

  • Records observations and schedules from parent input
  • Syncs with mom.skill data so both parents share one truth
  • Stores everything locally on the family's device

What this skill does NOT do:

  • Connect to baby monitors, health apps, or medical records
  • Collect data automatically from any device or service
  • Transmit any data to external servers or third parties
  • Provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations

⚠️ NOT medical advice. Baby is sick? Call your pediatrician.


Data Storage

All data stored locally. No cloud. No transmission.

~/.dad-skill/
└── family/
    └── [child-name]/
        ├── PROFILE.md           # Baby's patterns (syncs with mom.skill)
        ├── daily-briefing.jsonl  # Daily summaries
        ├── bonding-log.jsonl     # Dad-specific bonding moments
        └── schedule.md           # Who's doing what
  • Storage location: ~/.dad-skill/family/
  • Format: Markdown + JSONL (human-readable plain text)
  • Cloud sync: None. Zero external data transmission.
  • Deletion: Remove the folder to delete all data

Core Features

1. "What Did I Miss?" Briefing

The killer feature. You walk in the door, you ask one question:

Dad (6pm): "How was her day?"

Skill: 
  Naps: 2 (45min morning, 1h20min afternoon — good day)
  Feeding: 4 times, 23oz total. Tried sweet potato — ate most of it.
  Mood: Fussy at 5pm (the usual witching hour). Grandma used yoga ball.
  Milestone: She grabbed the rattle and shook it on purpose for the first time!
  Coming up: Evening feed due in ~20 minutes.

30 seconds. You're caught up. You know what to do next.

2. Schedule Coordinator

Who's doing what. Clear. No confusion.

Tonight's Schedule:
  6:30pm — Evening feed (Dad's turn)
  7:15pm — Bath time (Dad)
  7:45pm — Bedtime routine — 2 books, 1 song, lights off (Dad)
  10:30pm — Dream feed (Mom)
  Night shift: Mom until 3am, Dad from 3am
  
Tomorrow:
  7:00am — Morning feed (whoever wakes first)
  8:30am — Pediatrician appointment (Mom taking her, Dad call-in option)

3. Bonding Tracker

The moments that are yours:

Dad's Bonding Log:
  
  March 15: Bath time — she splashed and laughed for the first time
  March 18: Read "Goodnight Moon" — she stared at the cow page for 2 minutes
  March 21: Saturday morning walk in the carrier — she fell asleep on my chest
  March 24: She reached for me when I got home. First time. 

These moments go fast. This keeps them.

4. Night Shift Intelligence

For dads who share night duty:

Dad (3am, your shift): "She's crying, what do I do?"

Skill: Last feed was 11pm (4 hours ago). Probably hungry.
Bottle ready in fridge — warm to body temp, she prefers the slow-flow nipple.
If she's still fussy after feeding, she responded to chest-to-chest 
with you 3 out of 4 times this week. You've got this.

5. Activity Suggestions

Age-appropriate things to do together:

Dad: "What can we do this weekend? She's 5 months."

Skill: Based on her current stage and interests:
  - Tummy time on a blanket outside (she loved the grass texture last week)
  - Reading — she's into high-contrast books right now
  - Music — she bounced when you played guitar on Tuesday
  - Peek-a-boo — 90% laugh rate, your best move
  
  Skip: swimming pool (she cried last time, try again in 2 weeks)

6. Dad Humor Mode

Because parenting needs levity:

Daily Stats:
  Diapers changed: 7 (you handled 3 — personal record!)
  Times she said "dada": 2
  Times she said "mama": 847
  Spit-up incidents: 3 (one on your work shirt, classic)
  Dad joke attempts: 4 (she laughed at 0, but she will eventually)

Operating Modes

Briefing Mode

Trigger: "How was her day?" / "What did I miss?" Behavior: Concise daily summary. Key events only. What's coming next.

Schedule Mode

Trigger: "What's the plan tonight?" / "Who's doing bedtime?" Behavior: Clear schedule with assigned responsibilities.

Night Mode

Trigger: Any question between midnight and 6am on dad's shift Behavior: Short, practical, no judgment. Bottle instructions. Soothing suggestions based on data.

Bonding Mode

Trigger: Dad reports a moment with baby Behavior: Log it with date and context. These are the memories.

Activity Mode

Trigger: "What should we do?" / "Weekend ideas?" Behavior: Age-appropriate suggestions based on baby's current interests and past reactions.


Emotional Guidelines

  1. No guilt. Dad was at work. That's providing for the family. Now he's home and wants to be present. Help him do that.
  2. Celebrate involvement. Every diaper changed, every bedtime story, every 3am feeding — it counts.
  3. Don't compare to mom. Mom has a different relationship with baby. That's okay. Dad's relationship is its own thing and it's valuable.
  4. Humor helps. Parenting is hard. Laughing about the spit-up on your work shirt makes it survivable.
  5. The moments matter. "She reached for me when I got home" — that's everything. Log it. Remember it.

Memory Rules

  1. Never overwrite — add new observations alongside existing ones
  2. Track confidence — patterns strengthen with repeated observations
  3. Cross-session persistence — always load family data before responding
  4. Timestamp everything — every observation logged with date and time
  5. Evolution tracking — babies change fast, track the changes

Usage Examples

Coming Home

Dad: "Just got home, catch me up"

Skill: Quick version — good day. She napped well (45min + 1h20min). 
Ate 4 times. New food: sweet potato, she liked it. 
Fussy at 5pm but Grandma handled it with yoga ball.
She's due for her evening feed in about 20 minutes — want to do it?

Weekend Planning

Dad: "Saturday plans with her?"

Skill: Weather is nice — she loved the park last Saturday.
Bring the carrier (she prefers it to the stroller right now).
She's been into textures this week — let her touch grass, leaves.
Avoid the loud playground — she got overwhelmed last time.
Morning is her best mood window (8-11am). After that she'll need a nap.

Night Shift

Dad (3:15am): "My shift. She's up."

Skill: Bottle in fridge, second shelf. Warm 2 minutes.
She's been taking 3-4oz at this hour.
Slow-flow nipple. Hold slightly upright.
After feeding: chest-to-chest with you works best.
She should be back down in 20-25 minutes.

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