In a third-floor apartment in Boston’s Back Bay, Massachusetts, the dim yellow light of a desk lamp cast shadows against gray-white walls where old architectural drawings hung limply like fragments of an unfinished life. October rain pattered against the windowpane, each drop merging into blurred streaks like nameless sorrow. Emily Harper, forty-five years old, sat huddled on a worn leather sofa, clutching a thin ash-gray blanket. The faint scent of cold chamomile tea wafted from a chipped porcelain cup, but she didn’t bother to take a sip. A heavy sigh escaped her chest, blending with the sound of the rain like an endless, mournful melody. The small room, once filled with laughter, was now occupied only by a heavy silence, punctuated by the distant hum of traffic on Boston’s busy streets—a world that seemed entirely detached from her own.
Emily was once a prominent freelance architect in New England’s sustainable design community. She had been interviewed by the Boston Globe twice for her housing projects that used recycled materials and integrated solar energy, inspired by red maple forests and the Charles River. Design exhibitions in the Seaport District, where she once stood proudly beside her miniature house models, were now nothing more than distant memories. Her work had dwindled to small, sporadic contracts—renovating old apartments or sketching kitchen remodels for homeowners. She worked alone in her living room-turned-studio, the light from her computer screen illuminating a tired face and eyes that were perpetually bloodshot.
Five years ago, everything shattered like a building caught in an earthquake. Her husband of twenty years, Mark—a software engineer who had helped her build their home—left her for a younger colleague in Silicon Valley. He claimed he needed space to grow his career, but Emily knew that was just a surface-level excuse. The truth was that he had changed, and she was no longer the woman he loved. She didn’t blame him anymore; there was only a dull, lingering ache, like a crack in a wall that never truly heals. Her eldest daughter, Ava, twenty-one, had moved to Los Angeles to study communications at USC. Ava was busy with short film projects and a part-time job at a creative studio. Her son, Ethan, nineteen, was pursuing a graduate degree in mechanical engineering at the University of Chicago, spending most of his time in labs and research groups. Emily video-called her children once a week, but the conversations were usually brief due to time zone differences and their frantic schedules. She understood they were building their own lives, but their absence made the apartment feel even emptier.
The decline came silently but irreversibly. At first, it was just all-nighters to meet deadlines, black coffee for breakfast, and fast food from nearby chains for dinner. Gradually, she stopped attending her yoga classes altogether—the ones she used to go to three times a week at a small studio on Beacon Street. She no longer ran along the Charles River in the early morning when mist covered the water and seagulls called out. Instead, she spent long nights scrolling through social media until 3:00 AM, watching old friends post photos of happy families and summer vacations in Cape Cod, telling herself she didn’t deserve any of it. Her skin grew dull, her hair fell out in clumps when she brushed it each morning, and her weight fluctuated wildly—gaining fifteen pounds in the first year after the divorce due to emotional eating, then losing ten pounds abruptly from stress that killed her appetite. She stood before the bathroom mirror, looking at a stranger with dark circles under her eyes, a rare smile, and a voice raspy from lack of conversation.
Physical symptoms piled up like bricks weighing down her body. Chronic insomnia left her lying for hours staring at the white ceiling, her heart racing every time she thought about mortgage bills, unstable work, and a blurred future. Persistent fatigue forced her to rest midday, sometimes falling asleep right at her desk with drawings still unfinished. A disrupted menstrual cycle—a clear sign of perimenopause—brought abdominal pain as sharp as a knife and sudden hot flashes in the middle of freezing Boston winter nights. She often woke up in the middle of the night drenched in sweat, forced to change her clothes and lie back down, watching the clock and waiting for dawn. Mentally, things were worse; constant anxiety made her jump at the sound of the doorbell, and she found herself snapping at delivery workers just because a package arrived late. Bouts of mild depression kept her bedridden all weekend—unwilling to eat, unwilling to bathe, simply wishing for time to stop.
She had tried every method possible within her limited budget. Popular health apps like Calm, Headspace, and MyFitnessPal; nutritional chatbots; and free online workouts on YouTube. But they were all the same: cold, mechanical, and lacking empathy. “You could try drinking more water,” a chatbot would say in a monotone voice. Emily laughed bitterly in the darkness. “If water were enough, I wouldn’t be sitting here alone in the middle of the night.” She tried joining Facebook groups for perimenopause and divorce, but the generic comments and arguments only drained her further. Friends drifted away. Sarah, her best friend from college who used to run with her every morning, was now busy with two young children and a marketing job downtown. They only exchanged brief texts on birthdays or Christmas. Emily stopped attending Saturday coffee meetups at their usual spot on Newbury Street, where the scent of roasted beans and the sound of jazz used to relax her. She was afraid to answer the question “How have you been?”—afraid to admit she was drowning. With finances tight after the divorce, she couldn’t afford long-term therapy with a private doctor; two hundred dollars per session was far beyond her current income.
One evening in March, while the rain continued to fall and a cold wind whistled through the window cracks, Emily was scrolling through Facebook in a daze. An advertisement appeared: Strongbody AI – A platform connecting you with real health experts dedicated to women. Not a chatbot, not generic advice, but live video calls with doctors, coaches, and nutritionists. She clicked to sign up for a free trial, not hoping for much, driven only by curiosity and a touch of desperation.
The first consultation took place the following morning. Her laptop screen lit up, and Emily saw Dr. Sophia Ramirez, a Latina woman in her fifties with her hair neatly tied back and a warm smile, calling from her office in Los Angeles. Dr. Sophia was a psychologist and holistic women’s health specialist with over fifteen years of experience helping middle-aged women navigate perimenopause, mental health crises, and life rebuilding.
“Hello Emily, I’m Sophia. I’m here to listen to you, not to lecture you. Tell me, what is weighing most heavily on you right now?” Her voice was gentle, like a long-distance hug through the screen.
Emily was silent for a few seconds before the tears started to flow. She told her everything: the divorce, the loneliness, the insomnia, the hot flashes, the feeling that she was useless and valueless. Dr. Sophia listened without interrupting, only nodding and taking gentle notes. “Thank you for sharing, Emily. You were very brave to say that. We will start with the smallest things—according to your circadian rhythm, your hormonal cycle, your sleep, and your emotions. I won’t give you a generic solution; we will build a plan together that fits you specifically.”
Strongbody AI was completely different from anything Emily had tried. The interface was simple and easy to use, featuring daily tracking logs, personalized menstrual cycle charts, and adjustment plans that shifted as hormones fluctuated. Most importantly, it was a bridge to a real human; the AI didn’t interfere with the treatment but simply connected her to the expert. However, the platform had practical limitations. Video connections were sometimes slow due to the time difference between Boston and Los Angeles. Particularly during peak evening hours on the East Coast, experts weren’t always immediately available. Some advanced features, such as detailed nutritional counseling, blood analysis, or intensive support groups, required a monthly subscription of about forty-nine dollars. Emily had to consider it carefully given her tight budget. But she decided to try, because for the first time in years, she felt truly heard and not judged.
The journey began with small changes. On the first day, Emily only needed to drink two liters of water; she set reminders on her phone, and each time she drank, she rewarded herself by looking out the window at the red maple leaves gently falling onto the sidewalk. She practiced deep breathing for five minutes every morning, sitting on her old yoga mat in the living room, inhaling the scent of pine from a scented candle she bought at a small shop in Harvard Square. Going to bed before eleven was the hardest part, but she turned off the lights, pulled up her thin blanket, and listened to the rain falling like a gentle lullaby from nature.
There were days of relapse. In the second month, fluctuating hormones made her irritable, and she cried for no reason. She messaged Dr. Sophia at one in the morning: “I can’t do this. I’m too tired. I feel like I’ve failed.”
The reply came immediately: “Emily, today is a hard day. You don’t have to be perfect. Try just one thing: stand up and walk around the room for two minutes, then go back to bed. Tomorrow morning we will adjust the plan; perhaps we need more magnesium at dinner and a relaxation exercise before bed. You are not alone. I am here with you.”
The virtual support group on the platform also became a place where Emily gradually opened up. Other women in New York, Seattle, and Chicago shared similar stories. Emily sent her first message: “Today I had a full breakfast—boiled eggs and spinach. It’s been a long time since I felt full until noon.” A group member named Maria in Miami replied instantly: “Emily, I used to be just like that. Now I walk every morning with my daughter. Just take it one step at a time. Don’t push yourself too hard. You are doing great.”
Sarah, her old best friend, unexpectedly reappeared. After a long message Emily sent her on a rainy afternoon, Sarah video-called. She appeared on the screen with messy curls and that familiar smile. “Emily, why didn’t you say anything? I was so worried about you. You look so tired. I see you’ve lost a lot of weight.”
Emily choked up. “I didn’t know where to start, Sarah. I was afraid of bothering everyone. I thought I wasn’t worth caring about anymore.”
Sarah shook her head vigorously. “You’re not a bother. You’re my friend. Do you remember those early morning runs with me along the Charles River? You used to be my inspiration. I’m coming over this weekend. We’ll cook together like the old days. I’ll bring the ingredients; you just have to open the door.”
That weekend, Sarah arrived with a basket of fresh vegetables from the farmers’ market and a bottle of red wine. They cooked a grilled chicken salad in the small kitchen. Emily talked about Strongbody AI, about Dr. Sophia, and the small changes. Sarah listened and then squeezed her hand. “You’re doing so well, Emily. I see you smiling more already. I’m so proud of you.”
Then, an unexpected turn occurred in the fourth month. Emily woke up in the middle of the night with sharp pain in her lower right abdomen, breaking into a sweat with her heart racing. Panicked, she thought of cancer or a severe complication of perimenopause. With trembling hands, she opened Strongbody AI and hit the “Emergency Connect” button. Within five minutes, Dr. Sophia appeared on the screen, her voice calm but professional. “Emily, breathe deeply with me. Describe the pain: location, intensity, duration. We will decide if you need to go to the emergency room.”
The doctor guided her through symptom monitoring, advised her to drink warm water, and suggested lying on her left side. The next morning, Emily went to a hospital near Massachusetts General as advised. The result: a benign ovarian cyst, detected early thanks to the detailed cycle logs on the platform. Dr. Sophia monitored her closely afterward, adjusting her nutrition plan to reduce inflammatory foods and increase omega-3s and supportive herbs. “You acted in time, Emily. That is the power of proactive care, and you were the one who decided to open the app at that moment.”
But Emily knew that her own effort was the deciding factor. She began cooking for herself every day instead of ordering out. She bought healthy cookbooks and tried making green smoothies every morning. She joined a community yoga class at a nearby fitness center, despite initially feeling self-conscious about her body no longer being firm. She met Lisa, a young instructor in the class. Lisa noticed Emily’s effort and often encouraged her after each session. “Emily, you’re doing great. Don’t compare yourself to anyone. Just focus on your breath and the feeling of your body changing. You are making visible progress.”
In the fifth month, Emily landed her first major project in years: designing a small, sustainable home for a young family in Cambridge. They wanted to integrate a hanging garden, solar energy, and recycled materials. Emily spent hours researching and sketching until late. But this time, she didn’t pull all-nighters. She set a limit to stop working at 10:00 PM and made time for herself. She walked around the neighborhood, watching the streetlights and listening to mental health podcasts. She video-called Ava and Ethan more often, sharing the small changes in her life.
“Mom, I think you look much brighter,” Ava said during a call from California. “You’re smiling more. I’m so happy. Are you exercising?”
“Yes, I am. I do yoga three times a week and walk along the Charles River. I also have a support platform called Strongbody AI. I get to talk to real doctors, not machines.” She told them about Dr. Sophia and her six-month journey. Ethan chimed in, “You’re amazing, Mom! I’m coming home to Boston this Christmas. We’ll cook and go for walks together. I miss you so much.”
After six months, the changes were so distinct that Emily herself was surprised. Her skin was brighter, and her hair grew thick again thanks to biotin supplements and a diet rich in omega-3s like salmon and chia seeds. She slept soundly for seven hours every night, no longer plagued by midnight hot flashes. Her mood stabilized, and her anxiety plummeted. She returned to work more effectively, taking on more green housing projects. She video-called Ava and Ethan more frequently, laughing more as she shared stories of the old days and her recent yoga sessions.
One autumn afternoon, Emily hosted a small party at home. The scent of cinnamon apple cake wafted from the kitchen, and the laughter of Sarah, Maria—the support group friend who had flown from Miami to visit Boston—and two other old friends rang out around the dinner table. They raised glasses of red wine and told old stories. Emily held a warm cup of chamomile tea, looking out the window where golden leaves fell gently, no longer clinging to the cold frost as before.
“Dr. Sophia once told me: ‘Taking care of yourself isn’t selfish; it’s how you keep the fire burning to warm those around you,'” Emily said, her voice warmer and more confident. “I used to think I had lost everything. But it turns out that with just one real connection, daily effort, and the right support at the right time, I could find myself again. And not just find myself, but become stronger.”She whispered to herself: In isolation, deep connection and proactive care can save a life.” Then she stood up and opened the window to let the Boston autumn breeze—carrying the scent of fallen leaves and hope—into the room that was once so dark. Emily’s journey was not over. She still faced days of fluctuating hormones, was still learning to forgive herself and Mark, and was still rebuilding her relationships. She knew that Strongbody AI and Dr. Sophia were vital catalysts, but she was the one at the wheel, one step at a time. Life in Boston remained bustling with new projects, cozy coffee dates with Sarah, and video calls full of laughter with Ava and Ethan. And Emily was walking each step more firmly every day, with the belief that she deserved to be happy and healthy.
Overview of StrongBody AI
StrongBody AI is a platform connecting services and products in the fields of health, proactive health care, and mental health, operating at the official and sole address: https://strongbody.ai. The platform connects real doctors, real pharmacists, and real proactive health care experts (sellers) with users (buyers) worldwide, allowing sellers to provide remote/on-site consultations, online training, sell related products, post blogs to build credibility, and proactively contact potential customers via Active Message. Buyers can send requests, place orders, receive offers, and build personal care teams. The platform automatically matches based on expertise, supports payments via Stripe/Paypal (over 200 countries). With tens of millions of users from the US, UK, EU, Canada, and others, the platform generates thousands of daily requests, helping sellers reach high-income customers and buyers easily find suitable real experts.
Operating Model and Capabilities
Not a scheduling platform
StrongBody AI is where sellers receive requests from buyers, proactively send offers, conduct direct transactions via chat, offer acceptance, and payment. This pioneering feature provides initiative and maximum convenience for both sides, suitable for real-world health care transactions – something no other platform offers.
Not a medical tool / AI
StrongBody AI is a human connection platform, enabling users to connect with real, verified healthcare professionals who hold valid qualifications and proven professional experience from countries around the world.
All consultations and information exchanges take place directly between users and real human experts, via B-Messenger chat or third-party communication tools such as Telegram, Zoom, or phone calls.
StrongBody AI only facilitates connections, payment processing, and comparison tools; it does not interfere in consultation content, professional judgment, medical decisions, or service delivery. All healthcare-related discussions and decisions are made exclusively between users and real licensed professionals.
User Base
StrongBody AI serves tens of millions of members from the US, UK, EU, Canada, Australia, Vietnam, Brazil, India, and many other countries (including extended networks such as Ghana and Kenya). Tens of thousands of new users register daily in buyer and seller roles, forming a global network of real service providers and real users.
Secure Payments
The platform integrates Stripe and PayPal, supporting more than 50 currencies. StrongBody AI does not store card information; all payment data is securely handled by Stripe or PayPal with OTP verification. Sellers can withdraw funds (except currency conversion fees) within 30 minutes to their real bank accounts. Platform fees are 20% for sellers and 10% for buyers (clearly displayed in service pricing).
Limitations of Liability
StrongBody AI acts solely as an intermediary connection platform and does not participate in or take responsibility for consultation content, service or product quality, medical decisions, or agreements made between buyers and sellers.
All consultations, guidance, and healthcare-related decisions are carried out exclusively between buyers and real human professionals. StrongBody AI is not a medical provider and does not guarantee treatment outcomes.
Benefits
For sellers:
Access high-income global customers (US, EU, etc.), increase income without marketing or technical expertise, build a personal brand, monetize spare time, and contribute professional value to global community health as real experts serving real users.
For buyers:
Access a wide selection of reputable real professionals at reasonable costs, avoid long waiting times, easily find suitable experts, benefit from secure payments, and overcome language barriers.
AI Disclaimer
The term “AI” in StrongBody AI refers to the use of artificial intelligence technologies for platform optimization purposes only, including user matching, service recommendations, content support, language translation, and workflow automation.
StrongBody AI does not use artificial intelligence to provide medical diagnosis, medical advice, treatment decisions, or clinical judgment.
Artificial intelligence on the platform does not replace licensed healthcare professionals and does not participate in medical decision-making.
All healthcare-related consultations and decisions are made solely by real human professionals and users.
Step 1: Register a Seller account for health and wellness experts:
- Access the website https://strongbody.ai or any link belonging to StrongBody AI.
- Click Sign Up (top right corner of the screen).
- Choose to register a Seller account.
- Enter your email and password to create an account.
- Complete the registration and log in to the system.
Immediately after registration, the system will guide you step-by-step to complete your profile and open your store.
STEP 2: Complete Seller Information (5 Minutes)
A standard Seller account requires full information to begin receiving transactions from customers.
Mandatory Personal Information:
– Full name, gender, and geographical address.
– Profession/Expertise relevant to the StrongBody AI fields.
Profile Imagery:
– Avatar: Real photo, clear face, matching gender and nationality.
– Profile Cover: Real photo showing your workspace, including people.
Real photos significantly increase trust and booking rates.
Introduction & Qualifications:
– Self-description matching your expertise, reflecting professional spirit.
– Educational background, degrees, and certifications.
– Practical Experience: Minimum of 1 year, clearly describing past roles.
– At least 2 relevant professional skills.
– At least 1 professional practice certificate/license.
Payment Information:
– Complete the Seller’s credit card information.
STEP 3: Post Services – MANDATORY for Doctors & Experts
Minimum Requirements:
– At least 02 Online services.
– At least 01 Offline or Hybrid service.
A High-Quality Service Needs:
– Alignment with the Seller’s expertise.
– Clear Description of:
+ Scope of work.
+ Service duration/delivery time.
+ Benefits for the customer.
+ Personal competence and commitment.
– At least 5 illustrative images.
– Language: Seller’s native language or English.
Support from StrongBody AI:
– Seller Assistant (AI Tool):
+ Suggests services matching your expertise.
+ Guides structure and presentation.
+ Increases professionalism and conversion rates.
STEP 4: Post Products – MANDATORY for Pharmacists & Health Product Sellers
(Products are for sharing and direct sale, not via a shopping cart)
Minimum Requirements:
– At least 2 products relevant to your expertise.
– Recommendation: 3–5+ products to increase conversion.
Required Product Information:
– Full product name, origin, and manufacturer.
– Key functions or standout advantages.
– Reference price.
– At least 2 illustrative images.
– Content in the Seller’s national language.Note: StrongBody AI does not process product payments. Buyers will contact the Seller directly for transactions and shipping.
STEP 5: Write Blogs (OPTIONAL – Highly Recommended)
Blogs help increase credibility and conversion rates (by ~30%).
Suggestions:
– At least 2 blog posts.
– Topics: Expertise, professional perspectives, career journey, public health.
– Each post should have:
+ Illustrative photos.
+ Relevant keywords.
+ In-depth content with evidence/data.
+ While not mandatory, blogs help Sellers gain more trust and selections.
STEP 6: Immediate Store Visibility
– As soon as you have:
+ An Avatar
+ Listed Expertise
+ Highlighted Skills
Your shop profile will be public immediately.
– Customers can then:
+ Access your profile.
+ Send messages.
+ Submit service requests.
Meanwhile, Sellers can continue adding services, products, and blogs to perfect the store.
Standout Advantages of StrongBody AI
– No tech knowledge required: Open your store in minutes.
– Global reach: Connect with customers worldwide.
– All-in-one: Combine services, products, and professional content on a single profile.