For most of my career, the hard part was not having ideas.
The hard part was holding onto them long enough to turn them into something real.
That is the throughline behind this site, behind the work I do, and behind why I am so interested in AI right now.
I am not interested in AI as spectacle. I am interested in it as leverage. Can it help me think faster without thinking for me? Can it reduce the drag between intuition and execution? Can it make building feel a little more like momentum and a little less like administrative punishment?
That is the lens I am writing through here.
As a product designer with ADHD, I have spent a lot of time learning how to work with a brain that is great at connections, weak at friction, and constantly vulnerable to novelty. The promise of AI is not that it replaces craft. The promise is that it might remove enough resistance for craft to show up more often.
So this blog is where I will document the experiments: the tools that earn a permanent tab, the workflows that collapse under real use, and the ideas that only become clear once I try to ship them.