A garden for the people you love
Every relationship is different. Bloom maps each one to a living plant — and gives you six simple tools to keep it growing.
Every person in your life is a different kind of plant.
Your partner? That's an orchid. Beautiful, resilient — but they need specific care. Too much hovering suffocates. Too little attention and they stop blooming. The balance is everything.
Your mom? She's an ancient oak. You didn't plant that tree — it was already here when you arrived. The roots go deeper than you can see. You can't move it, but you can learn how close to stand.
Your college best friend? A perennial herb. Tough enough to survive a hard winter. Always comes back. But even the hardiest rosemary needs a deep watering now and then.
That coworker who's become something more? Bamboo. Fast-growing, interconnected — but it'll take over your whole garden if you don't set boundaries.
Bloom maps every important person in your life to a living, breathing plant — one that grows when you care for it and wilts when you don't. Not to guilt you. To guide you.
Partner
Orchid
Beautiful, resilient — needs precise, consistent care.
Family
Ancient Oak
Roots deeper than you can see. Learn how close to stand.
Old Friends
Rosemary
Tough enough to survive a hard winter. Always comes back.
New Connections
Bamboo
Fast-growing — needs boundaries before it takes over.
We don't watch your relationships. We cultivate the gardener.
Bloom isn't social media. It doesn't stalk your messages or count your texts. It doesn't score your friendships or rank your family members.
Instead, it gives you six simple care tools — the same ones every good gardener already knows:
Soil Check
How's the foundation? A gentle reflection on where things really stand. Not a quiz. A quiet moment of honesty with yourself.
Watering
When did you last really show up for this person? Not a like on their post. Not a "we should hang out." A real moment of attention.
Light
Are you seeing them clearly? Appreciating who they actually are — not who you need them to be?
Pruning
Is something dead that needs cutting? An old resentment taking up space? Pruning isn't cruelty. It's how you make room for new growth.
Fertilizing
What are they working toward? What dream could you water with a little encouragement?
Repotting
Has something shifted? A move, a baby, a new job? Relationships that don't adapt to change get root-bound.