Window glance & shoulder roll
A slow look at the horizon while the kettle heats. Two shoulder circles, a soft chin tuck, and the day starts with space, not stiffness.
We treat habit-choosing like arranging tiles on a board. You move them, you swap them, you let some rest. The day stays yours, only a little kinder to your spine.
Select a 20-20-20 cadence or a horizon scan, and place it where your screen time peaks.
A different lean, a softer angle, a hip realignment — small adjustments scattered across calls and tasks.
Choose where standing feels natural — between meetings, during reading or while sketching ideas.
Our Habit Architect lets you arrange a personal day on a 12-hour canvas. Drag what feels reachable, leave what does not. The board adapts as your week changes.
Our Sensory Sandbox places a relaxed posture next to a tense one, side by side, so you can feel which alignment your body prefers — without any expert telling you so.
Most people we talk to in Victoria already have routines; they only need a quieter shape for them. Here is one example of how the tiles can be arranged across an ordinary day.
A slow look at the horizon while the kettle heats. Two shoulder circles, a soft chin tuck, and the day starts with space, not stiffness.
Stand for the next short conversation. Move the laptop a hand higher. Notice the change in breath rate.
Eat somewhere your eyes can drift further than the screen. The visual reset is often more useful than the food itself.
Raise the monitor or lower the chair so the gaze is slightly down. Hold it for the rest of the day if it feels lighter.
A four-minute stroll, no phone. The transition tells the body the working hours are closing.
In My Flow, every habit you log adds a leaf to a quiet tree. There are no streaks, no penalties, no badges. The tree grows when you grow, and rests when you rest.
If you would like a small object to anchor the new habits, our showcase lists three calm pieces. Each one is presented with neutral information and a transparent price.
A gentle incline that nudges the pelvis forward and the spine into a softer line.
A pocket card with a quiet visual rhythm to remind you to look up. No noise, no app, no battery.
A soft cradle that holds the wrist in a more neutral angle while typing or sketching.
We are based in Victoria, British Columbia, and we read every message. Tell us what is awkward in your day and we will share a few alternative tiles that might fit better.