Why I built it
I was tired of being spread across a LinkedIn, a half-dead portfolio, and a notes app full of book recommendations no one would ever see. I wanted one place that felt like me — where the client work sits next to the travel, the reading, and whatever I'm currently into.
How it's built
Next.js, with all the writing in plain Markdown files so I can add a post or a project in a couple of minutes without touching the design. The look is meant to feel more like a map than a CV — dark up top, warm and papery as you scroll.
Where it's going
It'll never really be "done," which is the point. I want it to keep collecting the parts of life that don't fit neatly on a resume: travel notes, photo galleries, blog posts, reading lists, half-formed ideas, and the projects that explain how I think better than a bullet point ever could. A portfolio does not have to be a static proof sheet anymore. It can be a living map of what someone builds, notices, learns, and cares about.