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The late September sunlight, crisp and golden in the way only New England autumns can produce, filtered through the floor-to-ceiling windows of the thirtieth-floor office in downtown Boston, illuminating the dust motes dancing above Michael Harrington’s mahogany desk. At fifty years old, Michael was a man who lived by the ledger. As a senior accountant at a mid-sized but prestigious firm, his life was a series of balanced columns, projected revenues, and risk assessments. On this particular morning in 2025, the numbers on his dual 27-inch monitors were telling a story of success: a client’s portfolio he had been aggressively managing had grown by 14% year-over-year, hitting the $3.2 million mark. It was the kind of victory that usually warranted a moment of satisfaction, perhaps a leaning back in his ergonomic leather chair and a deep exhale. But as Michael shifted his weight to do just that, a sharp, familiar protest shot through his lower lumbar region, severing his moment of triumph.
The pain was a constant companion, a dull, grinding background noise that sat at a steady 5 out of 10 on good days and spiked unpredictably on bad ones. It had been with him for two years, the cumulative interest on a debt incurred by decades of fourteen-hour days, slumped posture, and the high-stress environment of tax seasons. It was subtle enough to ignore during the adrenaline of a client meeting but loud enough to ruin his focus during the long, silent stretches of analysis that often kept him at the office until 6:00 PM. He checked his calendar. He had a team meeting at 10:00 AM to present projections for the upcoming fiscal quarter, forecasting an 8% increase in assets under management. He needed to be sharp. He needed to be the calm, authoritative voice in the room. But right now, he just felt stiff, old, and tired.
He finished typing an email to a junior associate regarding tax-loss harvesting strategies for a high-net-worth individual—a move that would save the client nearly $15,000 annually—and hit send. The physical act of reaching for the mouse sent another twinge down his sciatic nerve. That was it. He stood up, grimacing, and walked to the office kitchen. The smell of freshly brewed dark roast coffee filled the air, a sensory comfort in a day of physical discomfort. As he poured a cup, black, no sugar—part of his rigid routine to keep his breakfast intake under 400 calories—he pulled out his smartphone. He had downloaded the Multime AI app a week prior, on the recommendation of a tech-savvy nephew, and had registered for its health subsidiary, StrongBody AI. The registration had been seamless: email entry, secure password creation, and a One-Time Password verification that pinged his inbox in fifteen seconds. He had told the app he was interested in “Chronic Pain Management,” “Physical Therapy,” and “Chiropractic Care.”
Now, leaning against the granite counter of the breakroom, Michael decided to test the platform’s core promise. He didn’t want to scroll through endless directories of doctors, reading generic bios and guessing at costs. He wanted the market to come to him. He navigated to the “Public Request” feature. It felt empowering, like issuing a Request for Proposal (RFP) for his own body. In the text box, he typed with the precision of a man used to drafting audit reports. “50-year-old male, accountant. Chronic lower back pain (L4-L5 region) intensifying after 2+ hours of sitting. Pain radiates to hips, affecting golf swing (current handicap 18, usually shoot 92). Seeking non-invasive, time-efficient treatment. Must fit into a 50-hour work week. Prefer hybrid or remote options. No heavy medication.”
He snapped a photo of his office setup—the desk set at twenty-eight inches, the standard-issue chair that offered little lumbar support, the position of his monitors—and attached it to the request. He selected “Orthopedics” and “Physical Therapy” from the category list. He hit “Submit.” Behind the screen, the platform’s AI matching engine sprang to life. It began scanning the profiles of thousands of verified experts across the United States—chiropractors in Manhattan, physiotherapists in Chicago, orthopedic specialists in Philadelphia—filtering for those whose credentials, availability, and treatment philosophies matched Michael’s specific needs. Michael slid his phone into his pocket and returned to his desk, diving back into a balance sheet analysis where he needed to reconcile a $45,000 discrepancy for a retail client. The digital hook was baited; now he just had to wait for a bite.
By lunchtime, the financial district was humming with activity below, but Michael opted to stay in, unpacking a grilled chicken salad that he had pre-logged at 550 calories. As he cracked the plastic lid, his phone buzzed. Then it buzzed again. And again. He wiped his hands and opened the StrongBody AI dashboard. Under the “Received Offers” tab, three distinct proposals were waiting for him. This was the “Reverse Auction” mechanism in action—providers competing for his business with tailored solutions.
Michael tapped on the first offer. It was from Dr. Susan Lee, a chiropractor based in Manhattan. Her profile was impressive: twelve years of experience, a private clinic on Fifth Avenue, and a verified track record of treating over eight hundred corporate patients with spinal compression issues similar to his. Her offer was titled “The Executive Alignment Package.” It proposed a hybrid model: an initial forty-five-minute video consultation via the platform’s B-Messenger tool to assess his biomechanics, followed by three in-person adjustments at her clinic. She had noted his location in Boston but suggested the in-person visits could coordinate with any business travel he might have to New York. The plan incorporated spinal manipulation and soft tissue mobilization, aiming for a 30% improvement in mobility within three weeks. The total cost was $320: $120 for the virtual assessment and $200 for the adjustments. She promised to send follow-up corrective exercises as video files. It was a premium, high-touch option.
He scrolled to the second offer. This one came from Jordan Hayes, a Physical Therapist operating out of Chicago’s Loop district. Hayes had ten years of experience at a rehabilitation center affiliated with Northwestern Memorial Hospital and specialized in “Tele-Rehab.” His proposal was fully remote, designed for the busy professional. It included a sixty-minute initial assessment call, followed by a personalized, app-based exercise plan. Hayes proposed fifteen-minute daily routines—cat-cow stretches, pelvic tilts, nerve glides—to be performed ten times each. The package included bi-weekly check-ins over four weeks and access to a shared tracking app where Michael would log his reps and pain scores. Hayes cited data showing his remote clients achieved an average 40% reduction in pain levels. The price was competitive: $280.
The third offer was from Dr. Robert Kline, an orthopedic specialist in Philadelphia with eighteen years of experience in a university-affiliated practice. Dr. Kline’s approach was more academic and equipment-focused. His “Ergonomic & Structural Reset” package outlined a fifty-minute virtual evaluation, specific recommendations for at-home tools (he linked a specific lumbar support cushion available for an additional $35 through his shared product shop), and two follow-up sessions to monitor the structural changes. His goal was a 35% enhancement in daily comfort through “passive support” combined with “active maintenance.” The total came to $350.
Michael felt a rush of control he rarely experienced in healthcare. Usually, he was the supplicant, waiting on hold to book an appointment three weeks out, having no idea of the cost until the bill arrived. Here, he had three viable strategies, transparent pricing, and clear outcomes, all laid out on his screen like competing bids for a contract. He ate his salad, analyzing the offers with the same scrutiny he applied to a merger deal. Dr. Lee’s offer was tempting—he did travel to New York occasionally—but the logistics of scheduling in-person visits felt like friction. Dr. Kline’s cushion idea was sound, but $350 was the highest price point. Jordan Hayes, the Chicago PT, offered the path of least resistance: fully remote, lower cost, and a daily routine that fit into the gaps of his schedule.
But Michael was a man who verified before he trusted. He utilized the B-Messenger feature to send quick queries to the experts. To Dr. Lee, he typed: “Would the adjustments require any downtime? I often have client calls immediately after trips.” Her reply came back as a voice note within ten minutes, her tone professional and reassuring: “No downtime needed, Michael. In fact, most of my executive patients head straight back to meetings feeling looser and more alert. It’s a reset, not a surgery.”
To Jordan Hayes in Chicago, he asked: “Can these exercises be done in a standard office without looking ridiculous? I don’t have gym equipment here.” Hayes responded with a text: “Absolutely. The plan focuses on discreet bodyweight moves—seated thoracic twists, ankle pumps, standing hip extensions. You can do 8 reps per side while on a conference call, and no one will know.”
To Dr. Kline, he inquired: “How essential is the cushion to the success of the plan?” The Philadelphia specialist replied: “It provides passive support. Think of it as a retainer for your back. It does the work while you ignore your posture during those 8-hour days.”
Armed with this data, Michael finished his lunch and went into his 2:00 PM meeting. He presented the revenue forecasts with his usual competence, but in the back of his mind, he was weighing the “healthcare portfolio” he had been offered. The meeting went well; the partners were pleased with the $1.2 million projected uptick. As he commuted home that evening on the T, standing in the crowded train car to avoid the poor ergonomics of the plastic seats, he made his decision. Dr. Lee was too high-maintenance for his current schedule. Dr. Kline was good, but Michael wanted to fix the root cause, not just buy a cushion. Jordan Hayes offered a behavioral change model that was scalable.
He opened the app, selected Jordan Hayes’s offer, and clicked “Accept.” The payment gateway appeared. He chose Stripe. The $280 fee, plus the platform’s service charge, was processed instantly from his linked Visa card. But the app flashed a notification that gave him immense peace of mind: “Funds Held in Escrow.” Jordan wouldn’t see a dime until Michael confirmed the service was delivered. It was the ultimate consumer protection.
Two days later, at 6:30 PM, Michael stood in his home office in Back Bay, his laptop camera on. Jordan Hayes appeared on screen, a younger man with an energetic demeanor. “Alright Michael, let’s look at how you move,” Jordan said. “I want you to lie on your floor mat. Let’s start with pelvic tilts. I want to see if you can isolate the lumbar spine without engaging your glutes.” Michael followed the instructions, feeling a strange mixture of vulnerability and relief. For the next hour, they dissected his movement patterns. Jordan pointed out that Michael’s hamstrings were incredibly tight, pulling on his pelvis and causing the lower back strain.
“We’re going to fix this,” Jordan said. “But it requires consistency. Fifteen minutes, every day. Can you commit to that?”
“I can,” Michael said.
The next four weeks were a revelation. Michael didn’t have to drive to a clinic. He didn’t have to wait in a lobby. Every morning, before his shower, he opened the app, looked at the day’s prescribed routine, and did the work. Cat-cows to lubricate the spine. Seated piriformis stretches. Nerve flossing. He logged his completion. After the first week, he noticed he could sit through the morning meetings without shifting in his chair. He messaged Jordan: “Pain is down to a 3.” Jordan replied with a thumbs-up emoji and a modification: “Great. Let’s increase the hold time on the plank to 30 seconds to build core stability.”
By the end of the month, Michael was preparing a complex tax audit report that ended up saving a client $22,000 in penalties. He worked for four hours straight. When he stood up, he braced himself for the pain. It didn’t come. The pain level was a 1—a ghost of its former self. That weekend, he went to the Boston Golf Club. He stood on the first tee, rotated his hips, and drove the ball 240 yards down the center of the fairway. He played eighteen holes and shot an 85, dropping his handicap from 18 to 15. He birdied two holes, his swing fluid and unrestricted.
On Sunday evening, Michael sat on his sofa, opened the StrongBody app, and marked the offer as “Complete.” He left a five-star review: “Efficient, effective, and fits a busy life. Jordan is a miracle worker.” He confirmed the release of the funds. The transaction was closed.
But the door was now open. Michael realized that this “Public Request” model could be applied to other areas of his life where he felt suboptimal. He had fixed the chassis; now he wanted to upgrade the fuel. He went back to the request feature. “Seeking anti-inflammatory meal plans. 50-year-old male, 2,000 calorie daily limit. Goal: sustain energy for 10-hour workdays and reduce systemic inflammation. Wife prefers we eat the same dinner, so needs to be palatable for non-dieters.”
The offers poured in again. A nutritionist in New York offered a $220 plan featuring high-protein recipes like salmon stir-fries. A dietitian in California proposed a $190 plant-based focused plan with kale smoothies and legume-based dinners. A functional nutrition expert in Texas offered a $240 package that included a supplement protocol with turmeric capsules (available for extra purchase).
Michael sat in his sunlit kitchen, comparing them over his Sunday coffee. The New York plan was focused on speed—prep time under twenty minutes. The California plan was cheaper and aligned with his wife’s recent interest in “Meatless Mondays.” The Texas plan was thorough but felt like too many pills. He chose the California dietitian. $190 into escrow. The PDF arrived the next day, complete with shopping lists organized by aisle for his local Whole Foods.
He started eating quinoa bowls with avocado and black beans for lunch instead of the deli sandwiches he sometimes grabbed. The effect was subtle but profound. The “3:00 PM slump”—that brain fog that usually had him reaching for a second coffee—vanished. He found he could power through a merger analysis worth $4.5 million at 4:30 PM with the same clarity he had at 9:00 AM. After four weeks, he stepped on the scale: 185 pounds, down five pounds. He used a home inflammation test kit he’d bought separately; his CRP markers had dropped to 5 mg/L. He released the funds to the dietitian with a note of thanks.
Emboldened, Michael tackled the final pillar: his mind. Tax season was approaching, and with it, the familiar tightening of the chest and the sleepless nights. He posted a request: “Stress management for finance professional. High-pressure season incoming. Need practical tools to decompress in evenings. Not interested in long psychoanalysis sessions.”
Offers: A Chicago psychologist wanting $300 for six Cognitive Behavioral Therapy sessions. A New York Life Coach offering “Mindfulness for Executives” at $260, focusing on ten-minute daily meditations. A Boston counselor offering behavioral therapy for $280.
He chose the Life Coach. The practical, tool-based approach appealed to his pragmatic nature. The $260 went into escrow. They met via video. The coach didn’t ask about his childhood. She asked about his day. She taught him “Box Breathing” and gave him journaling prompts to “dump the cache” of his brain before bed. The stress scores in his daily log dropped from a 7 to a 3. During a contentious negotiation with a client that saved the firm $18,000 in fees, Michael remained eerily calm, de-escalating the situation with a clarity he attributed to his new mental hygiene.
By December 2025, Michael Harrington was a transformed man. He took his family on a ski trip to Vermont. In years past, he would have sat in the lodge, nursing his back. This year, he skied blue runs for four hours a day, carving down the mountain with his kids. In the evenings, they played Monopoly by the fire. He won in under ninety minutes, his mind sharp, his back pain nonexistent. At work, his performance review was stellar; he received an $8,000 bonus for exceeding his targets by 10%.
His success didn’t stay a secret. One morning, standing by the espresso machine, he started chatting with Lisa, a colleague from HR. She looked tired. “I’ve been trying to see a dermatologist for months,” she confessed. “My skin is breaking out from the stress, and I can’t get an appointment.”
Michael pulled out his phone. “Have you tried a Public Request?” he asked. He showed her his history: the PT, the nutritionist, the life coach.
Lisa downloaded the app right there. She posted a request for “Holistic Skincare for stress-induced acne.” By the afternoon, she had offers from dermatologists in Miami ($160 for laser protocols), LA ($180), and Chicago ($200). She chose the Miami specialist for a virtual consult. Six weeks later, her skin had cleared by 60%, and she was walking into presentations with her head held high. She then used the platform for something even more personal—fertility consultations—finding a specialist who offered a $220 lifestyle protocol that gave her hope and direction.
By the spring of 2026, as the cherry blossoms exploded in pink and white along the Charles River Esplanade, Michael was jogging. He was running three miles in twenty-five minutes, his stride efficient, his breathing controlled. He had closed the fiscal year with 12% firm growth, bringing revenue to $35 million. His personal savings were up $10,000, money saved from optimized habits and efficient healthcare spending. His cholesterol was a healthy 160 mg/dL.
He had even started using the “Spiritual Wellness” category, finding a tarot reader who offered weekly insights for $60—a small indulgence that he found surprisingly helpful for reframing his perspective on risk and opportunity.
For Michael Harrington, the “Public Request” wasn’t just a feature on an app. It was a philosophy. It was the realization that in a world of overwhelming noise and friction, he didn’t have to search for help. He just had to ask for it, clearly and on his own terms, and the world—expert, tailored, and ready—would answer. He was no longer just managing numbers; he was managing his life, and the bottom line had never looked better.
Detailed Guide To Create Buyer Account On StrongBody AI
To start, create a Buyer account on StrongBody AI. Guide: 1. Access website. 2. Click “Sign Up”. 3. Enter email, password. 4. Confirm OTP email. 5. Select interests (yoga, cardiology), system matching sends notifications. 6. Browse and transact. Register now for free initial consultation!
Overview of StrongBody AI
StrongBody AI is a platform connecting services and products in the fields of health, proactive health care, and mental health, operating at the official and sole address: https://strongbody.ai. The platform connects real doctors, real pharmacists, and real proactive health care experts (sellers) with users (buyers) worldwide, allowing sellers to provide remote/on-site consultations, online training, sell related products, post blogs to build credibility, and proactively contact potential customers via Active Message. Buyers can send requests, place orders, receive offers, and build personal care teams. The platform automatically matches based on expertise, supports payments via Stripe/Paypal (over 200 countries). With tens of millions of users from the US, UK, EU, Canada, and others, the platform generates thousands of daily requests, helping sellers reach high-income customers and buyers easily find suitable real experts.
Operating Model and Capabilities
Not a scheduling platform
StrongBody AI is where sellers receive requests from buyers, proactively send offers, conduct direct transactions via chat, offer acceptance, and payment. This pioneering feature provides initiative and maximum convenience for both sides, suitable for real-world health care transactions – something no other platform offers.
Not a medical tool / AI
StrongBody AI is a human connection platform, enabling users to connect with real, verified healthcare professionals who hold valid qualifications and proven professional experience from countries around the world.
All consultations and information exchanges take place directly between users and real human experts, via B-Messenger chat or third-party communication tools such as Telegram, Zoom, or phone calls.
StrongBody AI only facilitates connections, payment processing, and comparison tools; it does not interfere in consultation content, professional judgment, medical decisions, or service delivery. All healthcare-related discussions and decisions are made exclusively between users and real licensed professionals.
User Base
StrongBody AI serves tens of millions of members from the US, UK, EU, Canada, Australia, Vietnam, Brazil, India, and many other countries (including extended networks such as Ghana and Kenya). Tens of thousands of new users register daily in buyer and seller roles, forming a global network of real service providers and real users.
Secure Payments
The platform integrates Stripe and PayPal, supporting more than 50 currencies. StrongBody AI does not store card information; all payment data is securely handled by Stripe or PayPal with OTP verification. Sellers can withdraw funds (except currency conversion fees) within 30 minutes to their real bank accounts. Platform fees are 20% for sellers and 10% for buyers (clearly displayed in service pricing).
Limitations of Liability
StrongBody AI acts solely as an intermediary connection platform and does not participate in or take responsibility for consultation content, service or product quality, medical decisions, or agreements made between buyers and sellers.
All consultations, guidance, and healthcare-related decisions are carried out exclusively between buyers and real human professionals. StrongBody AI is not a medical provider and does not guarantee treatment outcomes.
Benefits
For sellers:
Access high-income global customers (US, EU, etc.), increase income without marketing or technical expertise, build a personal brand, monetize spare time, and contribute professional value to global community health as real experts serving real users.
For buyers:
Access a wide selection of reputable real professionals at reasonable costs, avoid long waiting times, easily find suitable experts, benefit from secure payments, and overcome language barriers.
AI Disclaimer
The term “AI” in StrongBody AI refers to the use of artificial intelligence technologies for platform optimization purposes only, including user matching, service recommendations, content support, language translation, and workflow automation.
StrongBody AI does not use artificial intelligence to provide medical diagnosis, medical advice, treatment decisions, or clinical judgment.
Artificial intelligence on the platform does not replace licensed healthcare professionals and does not participate in medical decision-making.
All healthcare-related consultations and decisions are made solely by real human professionals and users.