What Bree is
A private wellness companion for check-ins, calming activities, journaling, Tiny Plans, and support pathways.
For parents and guardians
Breemaia is built to help a teen support themselves, not to give adults a hidden window into them. Privacy is part of trust. Real support still matters when the app should not be enough.
What parents usually ask first
Parents need confidence. Teens need a private space they can actually open. Breemaia is designed to hold both truths carefully.
A private wellness companion for check-ins, calming activities, journaling, Tiny Plans, and support pathways.
Not therapy, diagnosis, medical care, crisis response, or a replacement for trusted adults and clinicians.
Parents support the teen and the environment. Future sharing should be teen-visible, consent-based, and limited.
What adults cannot see by default
Breemaia is not being built as a surveillance product. The parent promise is clear: private journal entries, drawings, release tools, mood moments, and support-person details should not be exposed to adults by default.
The parent tension
Parents need clear boundaries. Teens need a place they can actually open. Breemaia is designed to make concern easier to act on without turning reflection into surveillance.
When to be concerned
If there may be immediate danger, severe distress, self-harm risk, abuse, medical risk, or a teen cannot stay safe, do not wait for Breemaia. Contact local emergency services, crisis lines, a clinician, or a trusted adult.
Call or text 9-8-8. Call Kids Help Phone at 1-800-668-6868 or text CONNECT to 686868. In an emergency, call local emergency services.
See help resourcesParent FAQ
No. Breemaia is wellness support and skills practice. It does not diagnose, treat, or replace professional care.
Not by default. The product direction is private by default, with future sharing only when consent, visibility, and boundaries are reviewed.
No app should be treated as a crisis detector. Breemaia can route toward resources, but real people and emergency services come first.
For soft launch, families request access first. Breemaia reviews the request before sending any preview link, code, or install guidance.
Keep it high-level: who you are, why you want to review Breemaia, and what kind of feedback you can offer. Do not include private health details about a teen.
Start with support, not interrogation: "Do you want quiet company, a practical next step, or help reaching someone?"