Envoi silencieux de fonds d’écran
Pas de notifications perturbantes, juste un message tendre qui s’affiche quand votre partenaire déverrouille son téléphone.
Les couples militaires vivent souvent la distance et l’absence prolongée, rendant difficile le maintien de la connexion quotidienne et la preuve d’attention subtile mais sincère.
Pas de notifications perturbantes, juste un message tendre qui s’affiche quand votre partenaire déverrouille son téléphone.
Planifiez vos surprises au moment parfait, même si vous êtes à l’autre bout du monde en déploiement.
Connectez-vous grâce au code LOVE-XXXXXX ou un lien d’invitation valide 7 jours, pour garder votre échange privé et sûr.
Exprimez vos émotions avec des vidéos, stickers animés et outils créatifs pour rendre chaque message unique.
Envoyez une photo ou vidéo qui réchauffe le cœur à votre partenaire pendant que vous êtes en mission loin de la maison.
Programmez un fond d’écran motivant ou affectueux qui apparaîtra au moment où votre partenaire aura un moment pour lui.
Partagez un fond d’écran souvenir du déploiement pour célébrer votre retour et renouer émotionnellement.
Zaragoza ↔ Beirut · UNIFIL mission
Aitor is deployed in Lebanon with the Spanish contingent of UNIFIL. Sara stayed in Zaragoza with Jimena, four years old. The first month was the hardest: Jimena asked for "daddy" every morning and Sara didn't know what to show her beyond a pixelated 9 PM video call. Then Aitor started scheduling wallpapers from camp, whenever there was wifi in the mess hall. One Friday at 7:22 AM, Sara unlocks her phone to check the forecast and sees a photo of the sunset over the Mediterranean with a line written along the edge: "same sea as the one in Peñíscola, Jime. remember". She shows it to her daughter before school. There's nothing else to say.
Cartagena ↔ BAM Meteoro, Operation Atalanta
Pablo has been at sea for four months aboard the BAM Meteoro, off the Horn of Africa. The connection out on open water is what it is: it comes in patches and disappears in patches. Inés learned early that chasing him on WhatsApp was pointless. What did work was leaving him a wallpaper ready for whenever the ship hooked into a network. One Sunday at 0007 — already the small hours back in Spain — Pablo's phone finally syncs and a photo appears: their kitchen at home with the coffee maker on, two empty cups, and three words: "saving you a place". Pablo looks at it in silence from his bunk. He doesn't reply. He doesn't need to.
Sevilla ↔ Ādaži, Latvia · NATO enhanced Forward Presence
Claudia is on a six-month posting at the base in Ādaži, as part of NATO's eFP deployment in Latvia. Martín, a teacher in Sevilla, counts the days on a chalkboard in the hallway. Every Sunday night he schedules three wallpapers for the week ahead: one with a silly photo of the cat, one with a drawing from his nephews and nieces, one with something of his own. On Wednesday at 0605, Claudia gets out of her bunk for the first formation of the day, picks up her phone and sees a photo of the patio at home with the lemon tree in bloom. Underneath, in Martín's handwriting: "it blooms the same without you, just less". She holds onto it in her head all day.
When a military couple says goodbye, the story that gets told is almost always the story of the one who leaves. The departure. The uniform. The plane. The mission. It's a story with a clean narrative arc: there's a before, a during and a return. What gets left out of the story is the other half. The person who stays at home lives a different kind of time, stranger, with no arc. A time made of routines that no longer have a witness.
The waiting of the one who stays is another kind of mission. One that doesn't end when the plane lands.
That waiting doesn't get medals. It doesn't show up in the homecoming photos. It's the mornings without the coffee made for two, the birthdays explained over a video call, the small daily scares that you swallow alone because "you're not going to call them about this". It's the changing of seasons that the other person never got to see. And it is, above all, the nights when you wonder whether they got a hot meal today, whether there'll be a signal tomorrow, whether Saturday afternoon will have a window.
LockLove doesn't fix the waiting. No app does. But it lets the waiting have gestures. So that when there's finally a window of connection — wifi in the camp mess hall, a port call, a free morning in Latvia — there's already something waiting for them on their phone. Something that doesn't ask for a reply. Something that just says: I'm still here, you're still here. No notifications. No alerts. Just magic. A quiet, intimate space just for two. From Barcelona, with love, for those who love each other across two different calendars.
Télécharge l’app et commence à partager de l’amour à chaque écran de verrouillage.