Nobody ever invented anything for tired arms.
Think about it.
Massage chairs? Backs. Foot spas? Feet. That percussion gun? Built for a 24-year-old's quadriceps.
Your arms — the only part of you working every waking minute — got nothing.
Today they will lift, carry, type, stir, scrub, steer, pull weeds, hold a grandchild, and wave hello roughly nine thousand times. And around 4 p.m., they will start writing you the invoice.
Kettle. Already a small ache saying good morning from yesterday.
The keyboard, the scissors, the trowel, the steering wheel — whatever your arms do for a living, they're doing it.
That deep, dull pull from wrist to elbow. You shake your hands out like you're drying them. It doesn't help. It never helps.
You knead your own forearm with a thumb, get nowhere, and call it a night.
The man who runs this company woke up one morning after lifting and couldn't straighten his arm. Locked. Like a rusted gate.
He grabbed the strangest object within reach — a curved brush the size of his palm. Soft dome bristles. Looks like it should be applying blush.
He swept it slowly along the forearm, wrist to elbow, ten minutes, while the kettle did its thing.
The arm stretched all the way out. He didn't believe it either. That's the point.

Ten minutes in the evening, in front of the television. Arms today. Shoulders tomorrow. Calves when the mood strikes.
Most people notice the area feels warmer, looser, easier to stretch the very first time. Do it nightly and tomorrow's arms start the day looser than today's did — that's the whole ritual. Tension, handled in the evening, before it compounds overnight.
What this is not.
It is not medicine. It won't fix your knees, your taxes, or your marriage.
It is not "ancient healing wisdom." It's a brush with very good geometry.
It does one thing: it pays your arms back for everything they did today — so they show up tomorrow ready to do it all again.
And they barely do arms.
Arms first. Every evening.
We don't get to edit them. Read them on the product page →
The dare.
Keep doing everything you do with those arms. Just add ten minutes a night for 90 days. If your arms, shoulders and mornings don't genuinely feel different — email us and we refund every cent. No forms. No fuss.
Two brushes for $37 — one for each nightstand. You already know whose arms ache on the other side of the bed.