The Habit Tracker That Knows
Who You Want To
Become
Systivia is an identity-based habit tracking app that flips the script. Instead of chasing streaks and checking boxes, you start with who you want to become, and let your habits follow.
Systivia, an identity-based habit tracker that asks who you want to become.
Streaks Don’t Build Identity
Every January, millions of people download habit tracking apps. By February, most of those apps are forgotten.
The pattern is predictable. You set ambitious goals. You track religiously for a week. Then life happens, a sick day, a busy week, an unexpected trip. The streak breaks. The app sends a passive-aggressive notification about your missed habit. You feel guilty. You stop opening the app. Eventually, you delete it.
This isn’t a willpower problem. It’s a design problem.
Traditional habit trackers treat habits like tasks on a to-do list. Wake up, check “meditate.” Go to gym, check “workout.” The entire experience is built around streaks, maintaining an unbroken chain of checkmarks. Break the chain, and the app treats you like you’ve failed.
But habits aren’t tasks. They’re expressions of identity.
When you reduce a habit to a checkbox, you strip away the meaning. You’re not meditating to check a box, you’re meditating because you want to be someone with mental clarity. You’re not working out to maintain a streak, you’re working out because you want to be a healthy person.
The moment the streak breaks, motivation disappears. Because the motivation was never rooted in who you’re becoming. It was rooted in not breaking the chain.
Systivia screenshots, a look inside the identity-based habit tracking experience.
Why Existing Habit Tracker Apps Miss the Point
The habit tracking market is crowded. None of the popular options solve the core problem.
The fundamental issue is that these apps optimize for the wrong metric. They measure streak length and daily active usage, not whether someone is actually becoming the person they want to be.
“Every habit app I tried made me feel worse about myself, not better. I wanted something that understood the difference between tracking tasks and building identity.”
Start With Who, Not What
Systivia asks a different question. Not “What do you want to do?” but “Who do you want to become?”
The app asks you to choose identities first, Healthy Individual, Disciplined Person, Good Parent, Creative, Lifelong Learner. These aren’t categories. They’re commitments to a version of yourself you’re building toward.
Every habit you create connects to an identity. When you complete a habit, you’re not just checking a box. You’re reinforcing who you’re becoming. When you miss a day, the identity doesn’t disappear. The direction remains.
This reframe changes everything. Missing a workout doesn’t mean you’ve failed. It means there’s a temporary gap between where you are and who you’re becoming. The identity persists. The guilt doesn’t.
What Systivia’s Habit Tracker Does
Identity-First Design
Choose who you want to become before deciding what to do. Habits attach to identities like Healthy Individual, Focused Creator, or Caring Parent, giving every action meaning beyond the checkbox.
Flexible Scheduling
Daily, weekly, monthly, whatever fits your life. Change schedules anytime without losing progress. Real life doesn’t follow rigid patterns, and the app doesn’t pretend it does.
Smart Completion Logic
Complete, skip with intention, or mark as missed. Skipping isn’t failing, it’s acknowledging reality. The app adapts to honesty instead of punishing it.
Personalized Celebration
Custom praise messages tied to your identity. Not generic “Great job!” notifications, messages that remind you of the person you’re building.
Progress is measured by identity alignment, not just habit completion. Instead of “you completed 4 of 6 habits today,” the framing is “you’re 80% aligned with your Healthy Individual identity this week.” There’s no public leaderboard. Habits are personal. Comparing your meditation streak to a stranger’s doesn’t help you become more mindful.
Building a Product That Didn’t Exist
Systivia started as personal frustration. Zaeem had tried every popular habit tracker and hit the same wall every time, the moment a streak broke, the motivation vanished. The apps were designed to make him feel guilty, not supported. So he started asking whether the problem was his discipline or the tool’s design.
The answer became the product.
He joined Wander Labs with an ambitious vision. The original concept was sprawling, a habit tracker with gamification, social features, Discord integration, minute-by-minute scheduling, and a dozen other features that sounded impressive on paper. The first lesson was scope.
Building a habit tracker sounds simple until you try it. Timezone handling alone took weeks to get right, making sure habits don’t break when someone travels. Scheduling logic for “every two weeks on Monday and Thursday” required building a custom recurrence engine. The technical complexity expanded at every turn.
Through Wander Labs accountability calls, the project found focus. Features got cut. The gamification layer disappeared. Social features were removed. The scope narrowed to the core idea: identity-based habit tracking. That focus is what turned an ambitious concept into a functioning product.
Simplicity like this isn’t cheap to build. Making the experience feel effortless took real infrastructure underneath, Apollo Client cache management for instant UI responses, and a custom occurrence generation system that pre-computes future habit instances. The technical depth became invisible, which is exactly the point.
A custom recurrence engine, Apollo cache management, and BullMQ background jobs, the infrastructure that makes a simple experience feel effortless.
What the project taught goes beyond the tech stack. Frontend architecture decisions, when to use local state versus cache versus server state. Backend systems design with NestJS, Prisma, and BullMQ for background job processing. Date and time handling across timezones and recurrence patterns. And the hardest skill: learning to cut features, prioritize ruthlessly, and ship something usable instead of something perfect.
Where it stands now: Systivia is live on the Google Play Store with systivia.com up, the identity-first positioning intact, and the focus shifted to real users, reviews, and content. What began as one person’s frustration with broken streaks is a shipped product, built in the open through Wander Labs. Here is the path from idea to launch.
Frustrated by streak-based apps, Zaeem starts building a habit tracker around identity instead of checkboxes.
Ruthless scope-cutting: the week planner, custom scheduling extras, and the Discord-bot idea all dropped to protect the core.
The core loop works; focus shifts to making the identity angle the real differentiator, not just a setting.
Adopts a proper AI-assisted dev workflow and rebuilds toward a real, native Android experience.
The goal becomes shipping the Android app and landing the first real testers, not adding more features.
Systivia ships to the Play Store with systivia.com live, and the marketing phase begins.
The app is in real hands, gathering reviews and feedback, with a content engine coming online to drive growth.
Why Systivia Matters
Systivia isn’t a commercial product aimed at market capture. It’s a portfolio project that demonstrates full-stack capability through a real, usable application.
That distinction matters. Anyone can say they know React and GraphQL on a resume. Systivia demonstrates it. The codebase covers frontend architecture with React Native and Apollo Client, backend systems with NestJS and Prisma, background job processing with BullMQ, and the unglamorous but essential skill of handling timezones and recurrence logic across different user contexts.
But more than a technical exercise, Systivia represents a complete product thinking cycle. Zaeem didn’t just build features. He identified a gap in a crowded market, defined a differentiated positioning (identity over streaks), made hard scope decisions under real constraints, and shipped something that works. That’s the full loop, from problem identification to live product, and it’s the kind of evidence that separates portfolio filler from proof of capability.
For Wander Labs, Systivia validates the model. A participant came in with an idea, got structured accountability and mentorship, cut scope instead of adding it, and shipped a real product that people can use. That’s the outcome the program exists to produce.
Habit Tracker FAQ
Build Something Real.
Most communities optimize for engagement, more members, more messages, more activity. Wander Labs optimizes for output. We’d rather have five people ship real products than fifty people post daily updates that lead nowhere.
1-on-1 Mentorship
Weekly or biweekly calls with the founder and mentor team. Real conversations about your project, not recorded workshops.
Public Case Study
Your project gets a dedicated page on The Wandering Pro, with backlinks to your portfolio, LinkedIn, and product.
Builder Network
Access to mentors and serious peers who’ve built, shipped, and scaled. Not lectures. Not theory. Working professionals.
Fewer people. Deeper work. Real outcomes.








