
How I Got Here
I started in marketing, then slowly realized that most of the things I wanted to write about lived in a world I did not fully understand. Software, infrastructure, vulnerabilities, data pipelines, AI behavior. All of it felt distant, abstract and slightly intimidating. So I decided to walk toward it instead of around it.
Right now I'm studying Data Science and Cybersecurity, learning Python, reading technical documentation and breaking my code often enough to call it a personality trait. Every mistake teaches me something. Every bug forces me to slow down and think clearly. This process is shaping the way I write, the way I explain things and the way I understand the systems behind modern technology.
I'm not trying to become an engineer. I'm trying to understand the logic that engineers use so I can communicate it with accuracy and clarity.

I care about making complex ideas feel less overwhelming and more human. My focus is on security, data, AI and the inner workings of software, but my real obsession is clarity. I want to understand how things work so I can explain them without removing their complexity.
This means learning in public, sharing the messy parts, writing about what I get wrong and turning technical concepts into something people can actually follow. I believe in curiosity, transparency and the kind of honesty that makes learning feel less lonely.
My work sits in the intersection of content, systems thinking and technical literacy. I write for people who want to understand technology without feeling like they need a computer science degree.

Where I’m Going
I'm building a career that blends storytelling with technical understanding. My goal is to become a strong technical communicator, someone who can translate between product, engineering, security and the rest of the world. I want to explain complex systems with precision, write content that feels grounded instead of vague and create work that helps people think more clearly about technology.
I see this website as part of that journey. A space to document what I am learning, share technical ideas, publish essays and keep track of my evolution. If you are interested in security, data, AI, Python or the process of learning tech as a non engineer, you will probably find something here that feels familiar.
I'm still in the process of becoming the person who can explain these systems confidently. This site is where I practice.
