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Building a calmer way to understand sleep

Most sleep apps show numbers.

Sleep score. Time asleep. Wake-ups. Stages. Trends.

Those numbers can be useful, but they can also become noise. I started thinking about this while working on Luniva: what if a sleep tracker felt less like a dashboard and more like a calm companion?

The problem I wanted to solve

A lot of people want to improve their sleep, but they do not always need a complicated health report.

They need something simpler:

  • Am I becoming more consistent?
  • Did my routine improve this week?
  • What changed in my nights?
  • What small thing can I do better tomorrow?

That became the core idea behind Luniva.

Not just tracking sleep, but helping people build a rhythm around it.

Why sleep tracking should feel motivating

Productivity is not only about doing more.

Sometimes it is about recovering better, waking up with more clarity, and understanding the habits that quietly shape your day.

With Luniva, I wanted the experience to feel clean, visual, and encouraging. The app focuses on sleep score, bedtime consistency, recovery, and simple insights that are easy to understand without feeling overwhelming.

The goal is not to make users obsess over perfect sleep.

The goal is to make progress visible.

Building around rhythm, not pressure

One thing I kept coming back to while building Luniva was this:

A good habit app should not make you feel guilty.

It should help you notice patterns, stay aware, and improve gently over time.

That is especially true for sleep. Some nights are messy. Some weeks are inconsistent. Real life does not always fit into perfect graphs.

So the challenge was to create something that feels useful even when your routine is not perfect.

What I am learning

Building Luniva has reminded me that wellness tools do not need to be loud to be helpful.

Sometimes the most valuable product is the one that gives people a clearer relationship with something they already care about.

For me, sleep is one of those things.

It affects focus, mood, discipline, energy, and how we show up the next day. That makes it deeply connected to productivity, even if it does not always look like “work.”

What I would love feedback on

I am still shaping Luniva, and I would love to hear how other builders and productivity-minded people think about sleep tracking.

What makes a sleep or habit app genuinely useful for you?

Is it the data, the visual progress, the reminders, the routine building, or the feeling that you are actually improving?

Curious to hear how others approach this.

posted to Icon for group Growth
Growth
on May 30, 2026
  1. 1

    Interesting perspective.

    One thing I've been reading about recently is the idea that for much of human history people often slept in two phases rather than one. They'd have a "first sleep", wake naturally for an hour or two in the middle of the night, then have a "second sleep".

    Apparently that period of wakefulness was considered completely normal. I even came across references to it being used for reading, prayer, reflection and creative work. I think I've seen it referred to as the "God Hours" somewhere, although I'm not sure how historically accurate that term is.

    I'm curious whether you've come across any research on segmented sleep while building Luniva.

    Most modern sleep apps seem to treat waking during the night as a negative signal. But if segmented sleep was once common, I wonder whether some people are being told they're sleeping badly when they're actually following a pattern that's quite natural.

    I'd be interested to hear your thoughts because you've clearly spent more time looking at sleep science than I have.

    thanks
    Neil

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