Bliss by Meatspace

Piloted at Morty’s. Built for Everywhere

Bliss by Meatspace is our sister company - a digital onboarding and training platform that shares Morty’s mission but operates independently.

“Meatspace” is an internet slang that means physical, real world (as opposed to cyberspace or digital space). And that is the point!

Bliss may live online, but its purpose is to shape how people and pets experience the real world together.

At Morty’s, Bliss powers staff training and guest orientation.

Beyond Morty’s, it’s designed to scale into housing, coworking, airports, parks, and anywhere pets and people share space.

This demo gives you a sneak peek. You’ll walk through an orientation flow (choose your role: dog parent, day guest, or human-only visitor), then finish with a short survey.

Your feedback helps us keep improving Bliss - because every community deserves spaces where pets, people, and places can coexist in harmony.

Feedback welcome at hello@meatspace.dog

How Bliss Scales

Bliss is designed to grow beyond Morty’s - because the challenges of living with dogs don’t stop at the dog park gate.

From apartment to HOAs, Bliss helps renters, landlords, and housing providers set clear expectations and create thriving pet-inclusive communities.

Living With Dogs

For service workers, healthcare visitors, delivery teams, and building staff, Bliss provides dog-safe protocols so everyday jobs can be done with confidence.

Working With Dogs

Welcoming Dogs

In airports, hotels, parks, and public venues, Bliss equips staff and planners with tools to make space safe, inclusive, and truly pet-friendly.

Let’s Address the Weird Questions

Understanding the Concept

  • No.

    Dog training focuses on the dog.
    This focuses on human behavior around the dog.

    We’re not trying to control dogs.
    We’re trying to make shared spaces easier for both dogs and humans to navigate.

  • If it were truly shared common sense, we wouldn’t see the same breakdowns happen over and over at gates, leash transitions, and crowded moments.

    Common sense without shared signals becomes guesswork.

  • P.A.C.E. is a simple navigation pattern for high-pressure transitions:

    Pause
    Arc (create space)
    Check body language
    Enter calmly

    Not complicated.
    That’s the point.

  • Pet-friendly usually means:
    “Dogs are allowed.”

    Pet-inclusive means:
    the environment was intentionally designed with dogs and humans in mind from the beginning.

    There’s a difference between tolerating dogs and understanding them.

Why This Matters

  • Because pressure builds there.

    Dogs compress together. Humans hesitate. Leashes tighten. Energy spikes.

    Most environments wait until after escalation to react.

    Bliss focuses on the moment before.

  • Some people ignore everything.

    This isn’t about perfection.
    It’s about making better behavior easier, more visible, and more repeatable.

    Behavior follows structure — whether we design it or not.

  • You look at the moments where tension usually spikes:

    • crowding

    • rushing

    • leash tension

    • gate conflict

    • chaotic entry patterns

    And then ask:

    Do interactions become calmer?
    More spaced?
    More predictable?

    Less escalation is the signal.

    Not complicated.
    That’s the point.

  • Because we usually frame these situations as:

    • a dog problem

    • a training problem

    • a responsibility problem

    Not a design problem.

What Bliss Actually Is

  • Not exactly.

    Bliss is a behavior layer.

    Sometimes that shows up digitally.
    Sometimes physically.
    Sometimes through onboarding, signage, flow, or shared cues.

    The format matters less than the outcome:
    clearer human coordination in shared spaces.

  • Signage can support it.

    But the point isn’t the sign.

    The point is creating visible, shared signals at moments where pressure builds.

  • Dog parks are just the clearest example.

    The same pattern appears anywhere humans, animals, movement, and shared space collide:

    • housing

    • hospitality

    • parks

    • pet-inclusive businesses

    • public environments

    Anywhere pressure builds, behavior patterns emerge.

Business Model & Future

  • Bliss is designed as a behavior infrastructure layer for pet-inclusive spaces.

    The business model is less about consumers paying for an app —
    and more about helping organizations reduce friction, improve experience, and create safer shared environments.

    That can take different forms depending on the environment:

    • onboarding systems

    • licensing the framework

    • staff training

    • digital orientation tools

    • implementation consulting

    • park or hospitality pilots

    • membership/community integrations

    • behavior-based space design

    The core idea stays the same:

    clear human coordination at moments where pressure builds.

  • The people already dealing with the consequences of unclear behavior:

    • dog parks

    • apartment communities

    • pet-inclusive hospitality

    • private membership spaces

    • property groups

    • recreation systems

    • municipalities

    • insurance-conscious operators

    • businesses trying to create better shared experiences

    When tension decreases, operations get easier.

    That matters.

  • Honestly?
    Probably a combination.

    The long-term vision is a scalable behavior layer that can plug into different types of shared environments.

    Some parts may be digital.
    Some physical.
    Some operational.

    The category matters more than the format right now.