No. We considered it, then remembered we’re not selling wizard props. If you want to charge it under a full moon, that’s between you and the moon.
Physically: it’s a beautifully machined hunk of metal. Psychologically: if you believe it helps, it probably will. That’s the placebo effect—and it’s surprisingly legitimate.
A fancy rock with intention. Imagine a worry stone that went to design school, got a premium finish, and started charging for its time.
Use it however you like—stress relief, mindfulness, paperweight. We make no promises about chakra alignment (or misalignment).
No. We tried magnets once. The fridge stole it and we never spoke again.
Hold it, spin it, keep it in your pocket, swap it between hands during long meetings, or just admire it. The only wrong way is swallowing it. Don’t do that.
No object can do that. But it might give your hands something to do while your brain resets—and sometimes that’s enough.
Yes — as long as they’re old enough not to put it in their mouth. It’s durable, smooth, and oddly satisfying to hold. Think of it as a fidget toy that doesn’t light up, beep, or get lost in the couch cushions.
Because we’re honest about what it is: a physical anchor for your mind, with no pseudoscience attached. It works if you let it work.
We think so. It’s a buy-once kind of object—solid, beautiful, and quietly useful for years.