Unbuilt.

Personal substance impact tracker

A tool to empirically measure and quantify how specific substances (caffeine, cannabis, etc.) affect individual health outcomes and hormone balance, allowing users to track their personal responses over time rather than relying on general population studies.

CONFIDENCE0.75
BUILDABILITYSTARTUP
LANGUAGEen
WILLINGNESS TO PAYNOT DETECTED

SOURCE TRANSMISSION

IN REPLY TO

It really depends on the individual there, studies have shown caffeine and THC *can* disrupt hormone balance, but the degree seems to vary quite a bit from person to person, both are still WAY better choices than nicotine ofc, but not without their own consequences

I wish there was a way for me to know empirically whether weed or coffee were inhibiting my progress specifically. I pretend the weed makes my titties grow bigger.

POSTED June 16, 2026 at 23:05 UTC · 10H AGO · AUTHOR WITHHELD

CLASSIFIER RATIONALE

The post expresses a genuine desire for a tool to empirically measure how specific substances (weed, coffee) affect personal health outcomes. While the tone is somewhat casual/humorous, there is a clear unmet need: a way to track and quantify individual-level impacts of these substances. The parent context confirms this is about understanding personal health effects.

CAPTURED June 17, 2026 at 01:24 UTC · STAGE 1+2 CLASSIFIER

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