When the Category Isn't the Point
The mental health app market has solved a real problem: it made the first step accessible. No referral, no waiting list, no appointment. You open something on your phone.
But most of what you will find is built around a category. Meditation for an anxious mind. Journaling prompts for self-reflection. CBT tools for negative thought patterns. Mood tracking for those who want data on themselves. Each is built around a defined intervention, and each assumes the difficulty fits neatly inside it.
Not everyone's does.
When You Don't Know What You're Carrying
There is a kind of difficulty that arrives without a label. It is not quite depression. It is not acute anxiety. It does not fit the intake questionnaire. It is something particular — something you have been carrying through breathing exercises and productivity tools and journaling apps, and it is still there when the notification disappears.
What tends to move that kind of difficulty is being witnessed. Having somewhere to put it that is outside your own head. Receiving something back that was shaped by what you specifically said — not by an algorithm that has classified you.
A Conversation, Not an Assessment
Inside Asclepiad, you enter a real place — an alpine lake, a forest edge — through a stone gateway. You speak aloud to Maia, the AI companion. She listens to what you actually say, in the order you say it, not to a mood you have pre-selected or a symptom you have logged.
At the end of the reflection, Hortus — the storyteller — writes you one story drawn from myth, tradition, and literature, shaped by the emotional contour of what you brought. Not a story about grief in general. A specific one, for the shape of what you are carrying today.
Maia then writes you a letter — an Insight — that names what she heard, offers back something you might not have noticed, and sometimes poses a question worth carrying forward.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Asclepiad a mental health app?
No — Asclepiad is a reflection companion, not a mental health product. It does not offer clinical assessment, CBT modules, mood tracking, or a content library. You speak to Maia about what is on your mind; Hortus writes you a story drawn from myth and tradition; Maia writes you a letter. If you are looking for a structured mental health programme, Asclepiad is not that. If you are looking for somewhere to be heard, it might be exactly right.
How is it different from a therapy app?
Therapy involves a trained clinician, a diagnostic framework, and a treatment plan. Asclepiad does not offer any of those things, and is not a substitute for them. It is a space for reflection and witnessing — best thought of as complementary to therapy, or as an accessible first step when therapy is not currently available.
Is there a quiz or intake process?
No. You begin directly with a 7-day free trial and speak to Maia from the first moment — no onboarding questionnaire, no symptom checklist, no category to select. She starts from whatever you bring.
What if I'm in crisis?
Asclepiad is not a crisis service. If you are in immediate distress or at risk to yourself or someone else, please contact the Samaritans on 116 123 (free, 24/7, UK and Ireland) or your local emergency services. Maia will also surface local helplines if something needs more than reflection.
Is it free?
Yes — begin with a 7-day free trial, no personal details required. Use AsclepiCoins after that: pay for what you use, nothing expires.
If you are looking for somewhere to be heard — not assessed, not categorised, just heard — Maia is here.
Anonymous. No script. Just presence.