• Chris Messina (the inventor of hashtag) just hunted Youper on Product Hunt.

    Youper already helped more than 100k people around the world to overcome depression and anxiety.You can boost this number giving your support and sharing with your friends to help Youper to become the most beloved emotional assistant on ProductHunt.

  • Riding Horses

    Living on an island farm wasn’t in the plan. It sounds like something out of an indie movie, but there I was, sharing space with a bunch of animals and a horse named Camila. A small horse, probably a pony (?). Her main job was keep the grass low and turn it into manure, that’s it. I was glad that people weren’t riding her. The one time I saw someone try, I hid her saddle and said it was stolen. First time admitting that. Hope her owner never reads this.

    While she was getting her job done, I was coding and designing in my own unconventional way. No fancy degrees, just a lot of trial, error, and late-night debugging. Friends called me a “GoHorse” developer. They laughed. I laughed louder. It wasn’t a joke to me. It was an honest way to work, none of that “fake it till you make it” nonsense.

    One Saturday, feeling burned out, I went outside to check on Camila. The farm was buzzing, chickens clucking, cows mooing, birds having a full-blown concert. A different kind of debugging.

    In the quiet of the stable, Camila looked at me, unimpressed. I scratched behind her ears, grounding myself in something real.

    I led her into the paddock, her brownish fur catching the sun. Her shining eyes, she had the most incredible black eye, deep and knowing. I loved that eye. As we walked, I thought about unicorns, the mythical distractions I’d chased before. Shiny big ideas, big promises, mostly letdowns. Horses, though? They’re the real deal. No sparkle, just steady work.

    She stopped and stared at a distant hill. I followed her gaze, a wildflower pushing through the cracks of an old wall. It reminded me of half-baked ideas that somehow survive, despite the chaos.

    “Maybe it’s not about chasing the impossible,” I thought. “Maybe it’s about nurturing what’s real.” Camila nickered. Either she read minds, or she was just hungry.

    At one point, I tripped over a root, landing in the grass like a broken script. Camila gave me a nudge, as if saying, “Bugs happen.” I laughed. Laugh at myself is my second language, after JavaScript.

    As the sun set, I realized something. Horses don’t promise the moon. They’re just there, solid and dependable, ready to move forward. Unicorns? They leave you empty-handed when reality kicks in.

    I spent the last hour with Camila, untangling ropes, telling her about my latest project fails. No buzzwords, no pretense, just something real.

    Walking home under the twilight sky, I felt clearer than I had all week. Maybe it’s time to build more horses in my life. Real, steady, built to last.

    After all, sometimes the most magical things don’t need a fairy tale to prove their worth.

    So here I am, back at my desk, inspired by Camila and the wildflower. I’m here for real horses, not unicorns. I’m here to break even, not break hearts.

    Sometimes, real is the most magical thing of all.

    (っ-,-)つ𐂃

  • My first customer brought me here

    Three years ago, I was filled with anxiety. I didn’t know if anyone would ever be interested in my work. After six months of effort, all I really wanted was more time to make everything perfect—to have infinite time.

    I took a deep breath and thought:
    “Alright, Dieguito, it’s time to put your work out there.”

    And so, I published my first app for the world to see. I was excited about the possibility of those first customers. A day went by, then another, and…

    Someone very special made a purchase. It was another maker, an artist. Later, he stopped being just a customer and became a friend. I feel like my work inspired his dreams.

    Three years ago, I was insecure and anxious about whether my work would succeed. Even now, I still get butterflies. But that first customer gave me the courage to keep going and still fuels my belief that my work can inspire others’ dreams too.

    That first customer, artist, and friend is Alexandre Braz. This photo is the closest we’ve come to meeting in person. Our art connected us, and now I’m his customer—and I couldn’t be happier about it.