⸺ FOR PEOPLE WHOSE BRAIN WON'T TURN OFF AT NIGHT
Your brain didn't lose its off-switch.
You just never found the direct route to it.
You've tried melatonin. Magnesium. Valerian. Breathwork, sleep hygiene, maybe even CBT-I. You've gone through 13 supplements — and none of them held up in the moment your body was already in bed and your brain was still running at 180. That's not on you. It's on the route you took.
Body exhausted. Brain wired. 500 tabs open. Again.
What you need RIGHT NOW shows up far too late in a pill
You know the moment: 11:47pm. You're in bed. You did everything right — tea, no screens, dark room. And still there's that one track that won't stop. The email tomorrow. The conversation from two weeks ago. Seven tabs you haven't closed yet.
You reach for the pill. Maybe melatonin. Maybe magnesium. Maybe whatever the latest Reddit thread promised you. You swallow. And then you wait.
That wait is the problem. Anything you take orally has to pass through your stomach, get metabolized, travel through your bloodstream — and won't even reach your brain for 30 to 45 minutes. By then you've opened twenty-three more tabs.
Your racing mind isn't a chemical deficiency. You're not low on magnesium. You're not short on melatonin. What you have is a now problem. And you've been trying to fix it for years with delayed solutions.
Once you actually see that — not just read it, but get it — an explanation collapses that you've probably been carrying around for years: that you're "a hard case." That "nothing works on you." That with your ADHD brain you're just "wired that way."
No. You're not the hard case. The method was the hard case. You've been trying to solve a problem that happens in the moment you feel it — with something that doesn't arrive until 45 minutes later.
Skip to the offer ↓Why does the entire sleep industry fail at exactly this point?
Look at what's sold out there. Pills. Gummies. Powders. Drops. Sleep stacks. All oral. All taking the same route — stomach, gut, blood, eventually maybe brain.
That's not an accident. Oral scales. Pills are cheap to produce, high-margin to sell, easy to stack on a shelf. But nobody is building the sleep solution you need in that second in bed — because oral physically can't do what you need.
And the few brands talking about "the nervous system"? They're not wrong, exactly — but they're describing a state, not a route. "Calm your nervous system" isn't a mechanism. It's a slogan.
do anything at all
report negative effects
in the top-10 "vagus tools"
There is exactly one sensory channel that doesn't do this
Smell.
Not because smell "is relaxing." Because smell is the only sense that projects directly into the limbic system without a thalamic detour — the area of your brain that runs arousal and emotional state. That's textbook neuroanatomy. Sight, sound, touch — all of it has to pass through a central relay (the thalamus). Smell doesn't. Smell is the shortcut.
And that has a consequence the entire oral sleep industry is structurally locked out of: effect in seconds, in the moment, where the problem actually is — not 45 minutes later, when you've already opened the next ten tabs.
This isn't stronger than a pill. It's more direct. It's the difference between a highway and a back road, in the same car.
"But aromatherapy is just placebo..."
Before you click away — I get the skepticism. It's got 15,000 likes on TikTok. "I knew I wasn't gonna fall asleep just because something smells like lavender."
And you'd be right — if this were just "something that smells like lavender." It isn't. The point isn't the scent as a feel-good aroma. The point is that a targeted olfactory stimulus at the pulse-point — where skin is thin, where body heat actively releases the compound, where your breath picks it up the moment you inhale — is the fastest possible way to reach the limbic system directly.
This isn't magic. It's mechanics. Other roll-ons sell lavender. We sell the direct route.
Application at the pulse point: wrists, neck, temples. 60 seconds. Breathe.
Why now — and why the industry missed this
Lavender roll-ons have been on Etsy and Amazon for years. Sold as wellness add-ons, no mechanism, no positioning. But nobody has ever built this as a serious DTC brand for the ADHD/racing-mind market. Nobody connected it to the direct-route mechanism. Nobody put it in the acute moment where you actually need it.
That's the gap. While the whole industry has been busy building pricier pills and selling $300–500 vagus devices, the fastest route into your brain was sitting in a $35 roll-on the entire time. You just had to use it at the right place.
What every other option structurally can't do:
| Solution | Route | Effect in the moment |
|---|---|---|
| Melatonin / pills | Digestion → blood | 30–45 min wait |
| Magnesium / supplements | Digestion → systemic | Days to weeks |
| Vagus devices ($300–500) | Electrical / wearable | Device setup, power needed |
| CBT-I / sleep hygiene | Behavioral protocol | Weeks of discipline |
| Olfactory (direct route) | Smell → limbic system | Seconds, in the moment |
Who built this — and why
[PLACEHOLDER – FICTIONAL, replace with real or chosen founder story]
I built this because I had the problem. Late-diagnosed ADHD, years of 1am doom-scrolling, the entire supplement shelf gone through, melatonin tried multiple times and shelved. What exhausted me wasn't the lying-awake — it was the constant waiting. Waiting for the pill to eventually work. Waiting for the routine that was supposed to kick in after three weeks. Waiting for the tool that was supposed to fix my nervous system.
At some point I started reading about the olfactory-limbic pathway — the anatomical shortcut smell takes — and it clicked. I didn't need something stronger. I needed something direct. I spent a year getting the formulation right: concentrated enough that the stimulus at the pulse point actually lands. A carrier oil that releases instead of blocking. An application that takes 60 seconds, because anything more isn't an option for an ADHD brain.
This is the result. It's what I needed back when I still thought I was the hard case.
What others are saying — the ones who'd stopped believing too
⸺ REAL CUSTOMER FEEDBACK COMING POST-LAUNCH · BELOW: PLACEHOLDER PATTERNS
What you get — and what it actually feels like
A small roll-on bottle. Lavender oil in MCT carrier oil, concentrated enough that the olfactory stimulus at the pulse point actually lands. You roll it on your wrists, neck, or temples. You take a deep breath in. That's the whole application — 60 seconds.
What it feels like: not "I'm getting sleepy." More like the volume turns down. The tabs don't disappear — they get quieter. The thoughts don't stop — they stop racing. That's the switch you've been looking for.
One thing I want to be honest about: the more often you use it, the stronger the effect gets — because your brain starts to condition the scent as your personal sleep signal. That's a bonus. The immediate effect is there from night one. The reinforcement builds with the next twenty.