About

Most of my work lives in places where people tend to get lost—financial ecosystems, sustainability initiatives, technical infrastructure.

My role is to understand those systems well enough to find the story—so people can easily see what it means, why it matters, and what to do next.

That starts with curiosity—and mine runs deep.

I’ve always learned by doing. Building something, cooking it, or occasionally breaking it first. But more often, it starts outside: moving through the world and wanting to understand how it actually works.

Time on the trail turns into late-night rabbit holes on physics to understand the forces beneath the surface; an obsession with the perfect French omelet turns into a study of heat transfer, thermodynamics, and timing down to the second.

I’m drawn to the moments where things that don’t seem related suddenly are—where patterns repeat across completely different domains. If we can trace the technology in a smartphone back to the biology of a silk moth, we can find a human heartbeat in any system.

That same instinct carries into my work. I follow the question, test the edges, and refine until the “why” becomes clear. Not to simplify it away, but to understand it well enough to reveal the wonder already there. That’s what invites people in. And it’s what I’m endlessly chasing from my desk to the garden to the latest woodworking project I probably should have measured twice.