We kept noticing the same thing: we'd sit down at home to work and get nothing done, then go to a café and fly through it. That gap felt personal — like a discipline problem, a focus problem, a us problem. But the more we dug into it, the more we realised the room was doing something to our bodies that we'd never been taught to see. Environmental stress — noise, light, the absence of movement — accumulates in your nervous system whether you notice it or not, and most people spend years blaming themselves for something that was never really about them at all. STILLGROUND started as a question: what if you could actually see that? We built a tool that tracks body tension alongside the sensory conditions of your environment, finds the pattern, and tells you exactly what to change — not your habits, not your mindset, just the room. The hardest part wasn't the technology; it was learning to design something that felt like a compass rather than a diagnosis, that gave people agency over their environment without making them afraid of it. What surprised us most was how small the fixes actually are. A lamp. A sound. Something moving in your periphery. Three things. One afternoon. A completely different body in the same space.
Built With
- figma


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