Before she became a founder, Navya Myneni was working in music, performance and storytelling. She studied composition and ethnomusicology at the University of York, sang and acted in productions, wrote and directed some of her own work, and later composed background music for short films and multiple media projects. Alongside that, she was also developing animated stories and characters, work that would eventually shape Cocoon Organiser’s visual identity.
But creative work came with its own pressures. Like many people trying to do well in demanding environments, Myneni found herself dealing with anxiety, harsh self-criticism and the mental strain that can sit behind ambition.
How Navya Myneni’s Own Coping Systems Became the Starting Point for Cocoon Organiser
The problem wasn’t just getting through work. It was figuring out how to stay mentally steady while doing it.
Over time, Myneni began relying on a set of small, practical habits: journaling to untangle anxious thoughts, gratitude lists to shift her mental state, and routines around movement, food and rest that made stressful periods feel more manageable. None of it felt like “wellness” in the polished sense of the word. These were simply things that helped her cope, recover and keep functioning.
What made it harder was how scattered everything was. One part of the system lived in a planner, another in a journal, another in notes or routines she had to remember on her own. That was the starting point for Cocoon Organiser.
Why Navya Myneni Built Cocoon Organiser to Bring Planning and Self-Care Together
When Myneni launched Cocoon Organiser in 2023, she built it around a problem she knew well: planning tools could help with schedules, but they did very little for the emotional side of getting through a day.
“I realised that being organised and being okay are not the same thing. You can have your day planned down to the hour and still feel anxious, overwhelmed or mentally exhausted. Cocoon Organiser came from that gap, the space between managing your time and actually managing yourself,” reflects Myneni, founder, Cocoon Organiser.
The app brings together scheduling, journaling, gratitude practices, affirmations and reflective exercises, so users do not have to bounce between multiple tools to manage both their responsibilities and their state of mind. The aim is to make self-care easier to build into ordinary routines instead of leaving it for moments of burnout.
That idea resonates because it mirrors the way many people live now, always reachable, often overstretched, and trying to stay functional through work, personal responsibilities and constant digital noise. Myneni’s own experience left her with a simple observation: people are constantly told how to optimize their time, but far less often shown how to support themselves through stress, self-doubt and mental fatigue while doing it.
Why Privacy and Clinical Safety Matter to Navya Myneni’s Vision for Cocoon Organiser
As the app developed, Myneni brought in psychologists to review the product and help shape the way its mental wellness features were structured. Cocoon Organiser has also received ORCHA assurance, an important validation of its clinical safety and data privacy standards.
That matters because Myneni has been clear about the kind of company she wants to build. At a time when many digital products grow by collecting or sharing user data, she has chosen to draw a firm line there. Her view is simple: if people are using a product to process difficult emotions, build routines or get through stressful periods, they should not have to question whether their personal data is being traded away in the background.
Cocoon Organiser is rooted in Myneni’s own life, in the habits she built when she needed steadiness, in the creative instincts that shaped the app’s visual world, and in her belief that planning tools should leave people feeling more supported, not more pressured.

























