About Us

We exist to help you reclaim your mental capacity and focus on what truly matters—actually living a happy existence.


We provide a certified worry outsourcing service. You share your anxieties, and our team of professional humans and advanced AI takes over the mental load.

Our Project

To enable a lighter, more present existence for chronic worriers. We provide a professional, short-term solution for mental disconnect, allowing you to effectively outsource your anxiety and rumination to certified professionals. Our ultimate aim is to help you focus your mental capacity on living happily and productively, instead of constantly battling 'what-ifs' and worst-case scenarios.

Our Values

We provide the gift of Mental Freedom. Thoughtful Worry is the essential service that frees your mind from the exhausting, non-stop conveyor belt of worry. By taking on your mental load, we allow you to reclaim your time, energy, and peace of mind, transforming your internal state from one of constant exhaustion and scrutiny to one of focus and calm.

Our Team

Thoughtful Worry operates with a dedicated and growing team model:

  • Core Staff: Our business is supported by two employees who manage operations, client relations, and ensure the quality of the worry outsourcing process.
  • Accredited Partners: We work with a network of certified professional humans and advanced AI services. These partners are the "freelance worriers" who are trained to expertly process, address, and contain your anxieties, delivering the core value of our service.

The story behind it

The Hour of Quiet


I, founder, had always known the weight of worry. Not the fleeting, practical kind, but the deep, marrow-aching anxiety that lived in his chest and hammered away in the back of his skull. For years, his mind was a relentlessly active cage, replaying conversations, cataloging potential disasters, and exhausting itself with endless rumination. It was like running a marathon in the dark, every single day.


He watched others—friends, colleagues, even strangers in the park—who seemed to glide through life with a breathtaking lightness. He used to envy them, wondering at their effortless existence. Then, one rainy afternoon, sitting in a coffee shop, the idea didn't so much arrive as it snapped into focus.


He was observing a friend, a person he knew to be outwardly carefree, casually unloading a huge, work-related fear onto his partner. The partner listened, nodded, and simply said, "Don't you worry about that. I'll spend the next hour thinking through the worst-case scenarios and come up with a plan."


In that moment, Elias saw it: the friend wasn't living without worry; they were living without holding the worry. Someone else was doing the heavy lifting.


He thought back to his own life, realizing how much of his mother's or girlfriend’s mental energy he had unknowingly consumed, and how much of his own focus was squandered. The true scarcity wasn't time or money; it was mental space.