Our story

CalmSpace was created to solve a simple but stubborn problem: most wellness apps either feel like a content library you forget you subscribed to, or like therapy you can't afford. We wanted something in between — a calm, conversational space you actually open when you're overwhelmed.

That's why we built Bliss, an AI companion trained on real therapeutic frameworks (CBT, ACT, mindfulness-based stress reduction). Bliss talks with you by voice or text, guides you through breathwork in real time, and remembers what helps — so each session picks up where the last one left off.

What we believe

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Evidence over hype

Every practice in CalmSpace traces back to a peer-reviewed framework — no woo, no shortcuts.

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Privacy by default

We don't sell data. Your conversations with Bliss are encrypted in transit and deletable on demand.

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Built for everyone

Affordable plans for individuals, families, students, and businesses — wellness shouldn't be a luxury.

Who's behind CalmSpace

CalmSpace is built and operated by ClayDesk LLC, a US-based technology company headquartered in Middletown, Connecticut. ClayDesk has been building AI-powered software products since 2014, with a focus on calm, human-centered design.

ClayDesk LLC
45 Burgundy Hills Lane
Middletown, CT 06457, USA
+1 703 646 3043 · info@calmspace.ai

Frequently asked questions

Who owns CalmSpace?

CalmSpace is owned and operated by ClayDesk LLC, a Connecticut-based technology company. We are not part of any larger holding group and have no advertising-based revenue model.

Is CalmSpace a replacement for therapy?

No. CalmSpace supports your daily wellbeing with mindfulness, breathwork, journaling, and an AI companion. It does not diagnose or treat mental health conditions and is not a substitute for a licensed therapist or doctor.

How is Bliss different from ChatGPT?

Bliss is fine-tuned for emotional support and trained with safety guardrails for crisis situations. It uses memory only with your consent, never sells transcripts, and is purpose-built for breathwork, journaling prompts, and reflective conversation — not general task completion.