A library of the world's healing knowledge. Held alongside one another. Never ranked. Built honest, built quietly, built for the world.
For most households today, the wellness experience has become more crowded than clear. The body starts to feel like a project. The morning becomes an optimisation. Every meal becomes a variable to manipulate.
Wellness is also now one of the largest categories on earth. Founders, teachers and practitioners have brought ideas about food, breath, sleep and rest into more lives than ever before. The Global Wellness Institute sizes the global wellness economy at over five trillion dollars.
The opportunity sits beside that scale, not against it. The audience is searching for an experience that holds it all calmly. Wisdom older than any current brand. Cultures that have practiced this for centuries. Modern science that has the evidence. All of it, designed together.
Most of what works for ordinary bodies has been quietly working for thousands of years.
Across cultures. Often through the hands of grandmothers. Almost always for free.
Ayurveda. Traditional Chinese Medicine. Kampo. Unani. Siddha. African Traditional Medicine. Indigenous practice. Naturopathy. Homeopathy. Lifestyle medicine. Modern medicine.
These are systems built on observation, refined across generations, with their own framework, their own logic, their own evidence. We have inherited them and we have lost the practice of listening to them.
The wellness conversation skipped over the most-tested protocols in human history because they did not come with a bottle.
Open a longevity podcast and you will hear about magnesium glycinate, blue light blockers, sleep tracking rings, supplements with names of compounds that did not exist a hundred years ago. Most of it works on people who can already afford to sleep well.
What worked before this conversation existed was warm milk with turmeric. A warm bath. Breath, slowed deliberately. A heavy meal moved earlier in the day. The phone removed from the bedroom. Your grandmother's answer.
The biohacking conversation will not go away. It also does not finish the sentence.
An honest aggregator of humanity's healing knowledge, held alongside one another, never ranked. Search any condition. Get thirteen perspectives on it, side by side. Read how each tradition approaches it. Decide for yourself. Track what works.
A library, not a clinic. Free at the centre. A daily practice for those who want it as one.
Wellness has been treated as a content problem, a clinical problem, a marketing problem. The thing that has been missing for two decades is design.
Not decoration. Not branding. Design as experience. The discipline that decides what gets shown, what gets ranked, what gets left out, and how a body feels in the room with the product.
The hard work is the restraint. Not adding the supplement upsell. Not collapsing seven traditions into one "natural" label. Not algorithmically deciding the user wants something they did not ask for.
What people call wellness fatigue is what wellness becomes without true design. Remedae was created intentionally against the grain. Not another supplement brand, but a call to see the beauty and power in what already exists around the world.
Three product surfaces, each carrying the same principles. Multi-perspective. Evidence-based. Safety first. Cultural respect. Each one shows up in how a page is built, in how a recipe is sourced, in how a tradition is presented.
Search a condition. Read how each tradition approaches it, presented at the same level of detail. No ranking. No house view. The user is the one who decides.
Every entry is drawn from credible sources within each tradition, so the integrity of each system stays intact.
Each system gets a page that holds its philosophy, its texts, its teachers, and the small daily practices that come from it. The tone is editorial, not pharmacological. The aim is to leave the reader knowing more than they did, not less than they should.
The hub remembers what you've chosen. Traditions you're listening to. Conditions you're working with. Remedies you've tried.
Each day Remedae greets you with a small ritual programmed around what you actually need. A calm companion on the healing journey, not a feed.













Two things are converging.
The wellness market is fatigued by its own noise. Everyone has tried something and almost nothing has stuck. The audience for honest, calm, evidence-respecting content is the largest it has ever been. They are not anti-science. They are anti the twentieth supplement this month.
And the cultures that hold this knowledge have, for the first time in two centuries, the platforms to be heard properly. The diaspora is online. The teachers are willing. The tools to honour them properly exist now.
The story of the next decade in wellness is not going to be a louder version of the last one.
Remedae is being built the way I have always built things. With small, capable people. With investors who can see the real potential here. With co-founders who want to build the editorial standard, not just the product. With practitioners who want their tradition heard properly.
If any of that sounds like the conversation you are already inside, the door is open.
For my mum, dadi and nani, who nurtured me with remedies I only understand and value now that I have my own child.
And to those who had the same experiences growing up in their own cultures, know that there is a world out there where we heal the same.
Maria.