About me.

I’m a creative systems engineer — not just by profession, but by mindset.

My design ethos was forged in the furnace of 80s and 90s computing. I came of age during a time when every line of code was a decision, every system taught you how to think, and every crash was a lesson in resilience. That early exposure shaped how I see the world: as a series of interconnected systems, each with its own logic, constraints, and potential for clarity.

Systems, philosophy & truth-seeking

I don’t believe in inherited truths.
I don’t follow traditions for tradition’s sake.
I believe that clarity is earned — through observation, iteration, and ruthless honesty.

Philosophy, for me, is not an academic exercise. It’s a debugging tool for life. I build frameworks to think clearly, act intentionally, and strip away illusion — whether in code, finance, relationships, or identity.

My work spans across:

  • Ambient intelligence and AI-based systems
  • Minimalist software design
  • Financial independence architecture
  • Life philosophy and human behavior analysis
  • Long-form writing and cultural critique

Everything I build — from automation flows to existential essays — is part of the same operating system: creative systems thinking for a more intentional life.

Where it started

I was that weird kid who lived inside my head.
Before I had words for it, I was already thinking in systems — daydreaming about control panels, pattern recognition, and alternate realities. Yes, I watched old Star Trek episodes and imagined how I could make that reality. School felt like a poor simulation. The real education came from writing software, PETSCII art, and the constant trial-and-error of 8-bit logic.

My first software was hand-coded on a Commodore 128.

By the time I was a teenager, I was running a BBS, writing ANSI login screens, and hacking together early logic-driven interfaces — long before UX was a thing. I didn’t think of it as “creativity.” I thought of it as truth assembly.

That drive to understand, distill, and redesign reality has stayed with me ever since.

I’ve spent decades designing systems — from enterprise infrastructure and AI pipelines to financial models and personal philosophies. I’m now focused on building a future merging all these ideas together.

What I stand for

I value independence over obedience.
Clarity over comfort.
Systems over slogans.
And thinking — real, messy, slow, original thinking — over belief.

Whether I’m designing systems architecture, writing philosophical essays, or modeling financial portfolios, the goal is always the same:


To make sense of complexity and build systems that support freedom.

Let’s connect

You can read my latest essays here, or contact me here.
If you’re interested in collaboration, philosophical dialogue, or creative system design — I’m always open to meaningful conversations.