Feel better in 15 minutes a day
Small, guided resets for real life. No overwhelm. No long courses.
Calm and Collected:
Manage your anxiety and get out of your head and into calm
15 minutes a day | 3 small steps | start anytime
From Stressed to Blessed:
Always tense? Calm your body when everything feels too much
15 minutes a day | 3 small steps | start anytime
Boundary Badass:
Stop saying yes when your body wants to say no
15 minutes a day | 3 small steps | start anytime
Express Yourself:
Learn to talk about feelings and build stronger relationships
15 minutes a day | 3 small steps | start anytime
Calm and Collected:
Manage your anxiety and get out of your head and into calm
15 minutes a day | 3 small steps | start anytime
From Stressed to Blessed:
Always tense? Calm your body when everything feels too much
15 minutes a day | 3 small steps | start anytime
Boundary Badass:
Stop saying yes when your body wants to say no
15 minutes a day | 3 small steps | start anytime
Express Yourself:
Learn to talk about feelings and build stronger relationships
15 minutes a day | 3 small steps | start anytime
small enough for your busiest days. gentle enough for your hardest ones.
Don’t know where to start?
Take our free 2-minute quiz to spot your emotional fitness gap.
+ Get a simple free 3-day reset with small steps you can use right away.
Treat yourself like your best friend
We exercise our bodies to stay physically fit – so why not do the same for our minds? Emotional fitness is your preventive training to ward off mental illness. Start training today.
Katharina Schäfer
Hi, I’m Kat your emotional fitness coach and this is my story:
What if you could train your emotions just like you train your muscles? Sounds absurd, doesn’t it? We go to the gym, optimize our diet, track our sleep. But managing our emotions? That’s supposed to just happen on its own. Until it doesn’t.
For me, it was anxiety. Then depression. That heavy blanket that settled over everything. I tried everything to better understand my emotions: counseling, various forms of therapy, I even studied social work and became a resilience coach to understand the whole thing from different perspectives. I collected theories like other people collect stamps. I could explain why I felt what I felt—the neurobiological processes, the therapeutic schools, the mechanisms. But when the anxiety hit, all that knowledge was only of limited help.
Over the years, what I now call “emotional fitness” emerged. The idea is simple: We train our bodies at the gym, so why not our emotions? Not as a one-time project, but as an ongoing practice. Small, concrete exercises that work when it counts. Building emotional muscle memory—that was my new mission. This realization led me to Kindori. I wish I’d had access back then to what I’m passing on today. Not just another theory course, but practical tools for the moment when things get intense.
Are you ready to build your own emotional fitness plan?
