Deepinder Goyal Eyes New ‘Temple’ Wearable Startup Focused On Brain Health

Deepinder Goyal May Launch New Startup Around Brain Health

Eternal founder Deepinder Goyal seems ready to enter the wearable device market with a new company called Temple. Sources said the discussions remain early, yet the project is already heating up online.

A “Coming Soon” Website Sparks Curiosity

The official Temple website shows a simple teaser. It reads, “The future of health starts where no one’s looking. Inside your brain.”

There is no launch date yet. However, the message is enough to fuel buzz, especially as Goyal continues pushing deeper into health-tech.

Viral Photo Triggers Speculation

Last week, Goyal attended an event for Eternal’s non-profit, Feeding India. A photo from the event went viral because he wore a small device on the right side of his face near the temple area.

People immediately started guessing what it was. Some called it a prototype. Others labelled it the first look at Temple.

Device Linked To Continue Research

Soon after, Goyal’s initiative Continue Research released its first hypothesis: Gravity Ageing. The theory explores whether gravity’s pull on blood circulation in the brain might accelerate ageing.

In a LinkedIn interaction, Goyal clarified that the device in the photo was an experimental tool used to measure brain blood flow in real time. He also said he has used it for nearly a year.

Temple Could Sell This Brain-Flow Device

Sources said the early plan is for Temple to sell this research device, though it is currently available only to research institutes worldwide.

Goyal added online that Brain Flow is already a known biomarker for ageing, cognition, and longevity. So the device stays relevant even if the Gravity Ageing theory shifts direction later.

Inside The Gravity Ageing Idea

Continue Research claims that when humans stand or sit, gravity pulls blood away from the brain. It may reduce cerebral blood flow by up to 17%.

The organisation suggests that increasing blood flow through passive inversion—where the head stays below the heart—may help counteract the effect.

Active inversion methods like yoga work too, but passive methods may be more effective.

A “Small, Cute Company,” Says Goyal

Goyal described Temple as a “small, cute company”, if it launches at all. He also said it would be “nothing” compared to Eternal.

Still, the combination of research, prototypes, and viral moments suggests that Temple may soon become India’s next talked-about health-tech venture.

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