When anxiety hits, breathing and meditation ask for focus you don't have. Qennu gives you something small and orderly to do — sort a few shapes, find their pairs — and the loop loosens its grip. A 3-minute ritual, not a thinking exercise.
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Tidying a drawer. Making a list. Reorganizing the basket at the checkout. In an anxious moment, ordering small things quietly settles the mind — but it isn't always available, and it's never structured. Qennu turns that instinct into a guided 3–5 minute ritual you can run anywhere.
One tap starts a short, linear flow. No setup, no choices to make at the moment you can least make them.
Two small ordering tasks — arrange abstract shapes, then find their pairs. Just enough to occupy your hands and attention.
It's 3–5 minutes if you finish — and no penalty if you don't. No streaks, no points, no «come back tomorrow.»
Most apps meet anxiety with more thinking — breathe on cue, observe your thoughts, journal the feeling. Qennu does the opposite: it gives the mind a concrete, finishable action to break the loop. Action first, relief after — not insight.
Qennu is built on Behavioral Activation — one of the most studied components of CBT, effective for both anxiety and low mood. The market is full of breathing apps, SOS buttons and meditations; a reactive ritual built on activation is not. That empty niche is the whole point.
Jacobson et al., 1996 · Malik et al., 2021
Qennu is live as a Telegram Mini App — open it in one tap, no sign-up needed.
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