Mella · a drawer in the dark, one small lamp

Don't be sad alone. I'll hold your heart, softly.

Write a worry down at night and tuck it into the drawer — its answer waits, on purpose, until morning. Seen with a clearer head, it's usually not as big as it felt.

Mella · nightly wellness · in the making

At night, even a small worry follows you all the way down

Lights off, lying down, something that was nothing during the day suddenly sharpens and grows. A quick 'it'll be fine' from someone eases it for a moment, but part of you doesn't buy it, and the worry lifts its head again — when really, the answer you need isn't for now. It's for the next morning, with a clearer head.

Here's how it works

Once at night, once in the morning, once a few days later. That's all.

  1. Night

    Write a worry, tuck it away

    Write it or say it aloud. Tap 'seal it away,' and it's locked, as is. No answer right then.

  2. Morning

    Get a calm note

    A reminder comes the next day. A short note acknowledges last night's feeling, sorts fact from guess, and offers one small thing you can do now.

  3. A few days later

    Mark whether it happened

    It asks: did it actually happen? Yes or no — one tap. Those answers add up into a record that's yours.

Write the worry down, and tuck it away

At night I won't answer. Your worry is sealed away under one small light. That waiting is, really, the whole of this drawer.

An example — not a real report

Tomorrow's presentation — I'm going to mess it all up.

This is just an example. In the real app, what you write never leaves your device.

If it's too much right now — get help →

Not tonight. We'll look again in the morning.

  1. Answering late is the whole pointtaken at night · seen in the morning

    The mind that worries at night and the mind that judges in the morning aren't quite the same. So the answer is held back by exactly one night — to be read once it's clearer.

  2. In the morning, a calm note arrivesfact from guess · gently sorted

    It acknowledges last night's feeling first, then separates settled fact from mere guess, and what you can change from what you can't — and offers just one small, doable thing.

  3. Worries meant to stay on your phone — onlyno server · no account

    It's built so what you write never leaves this phone — not sent to our servers or any cloud, so we'd have nothing to read. Kept on your device, locked, by design.

  4. Most of it never actually happenslooking back · it just passes

    A few days later, it quietly asks: did it actually happen? As your own answers add up, you come to see that the worries that loomed so large at night mostly just passed — not because someone said so, but from your own record.

We stay close

Mella is a tool for noting how you feel — not a medical device, and not for diagnosis or treatment. If things feel like too much right now, you don't have to carry it alone. Help lines in Korea: suicide-prevention 109, youth 1388, mental-health 1577-0199, and 119/112 in an emergency. Outside Korea, please reach your local emergency number.

When it's ready, you'll be the first to know

Still in the making — because we want to hand it, calmly, to whoever needs the night.

Coming soon · no account · worries kept on your device

Notify me at launch← Back to studio