My Journey

I started this site in mid-2024 as a personal tool—to better monitor my own health and support my efforts to age well.
My interest in longevity began after reading Outlive by Peter Attia. That curiosity intensified when my dad had a heart attack, pushing me to dive deeper into the factors that contribute to chronic disease risk. As a software developer responsible for overseeing complex systems, I found myself increasingly frustrated by the generic, often conflicting health advice out there—and the lack of cohesive, high-level tools to track and model long-term health.
I kept thinking about platforms like eMoney, which allow you to aggregate your finances and model your net worth decades into the future. I wanted something like that—but for health.
That’s when the idea for this site took hold, and I started pouring all my spare time into making it real. Returning to my development roots and building something I deeply cared about turned out to be the antidote I needed to break out of a slowly building case of career burnout. But as my vision for the platform expanded, I began to feel frustrated by the pace of progress.
That’s when I made another shift: I started exploring what it would look like to turn this into a full-fledged business. To my surprise, what I had always seen as the “necessary evil” of entrepreneurship turned out to be genuinely exciting. Thanks to an excellent TechVenture class and some generous mentorship, I realized I actually enjoyed the startup-building process just as much as the technical work.
Fast forward to today: I’ve recently received a Digital Sandbox award, which has allowed me to accelerate development. I'm now targeting a limited launch in summer 2025.
I invite you to explore the tools I’ve built so far and share your feedback —especially around the friction points you’ve encountered in managing your long-term health. With some foundational insights now in place, I’m now focused on solving one of the hardest parts of this equation: motivation. It’s a complex challenge, especially when the benefits are spread over decades, but it’s also one of the most important to get right.